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"And one begins to suspect an awful thing: that people believe that they deserve their history, and that when they operate on this belief, they perish. But one knows that they can scarcely avoid believing that they deserve it; one’s short time on this earth is very mysterious and very dark and very hard. I have known many black men and women and black boys and girls who really believed that it was better to be white than black, whose lives were ruined or ended by this belief; and I, myself, carried the seeds of this destruction within me for a long time."

James Baldwin, “White Man’s Guilt”

Reading Baldwin’s remarkably lucid and powerfully articulated “White Man’s Guilt” I am reminded, thematically if not in terms quality, of an essay I wrote in undergrad. I was writing about apartheid era South Africa, but also, I’ve since realized, about home, about the American inner-city:

Black consciousness activist Steve Biko explained once to his white liberal companion, Donald Woods, as he took him through the streets of a black shanty-town:

“[if you survive childhood] you grow up in these streets, these houses [in the black ghetto]. Your parents try, but in the end, you only get the education the white man can give you. Then you go to the city, to work, to shop. You see their streets, their cars their houses. And you begin to feel that there is something not quite right about yourself, about your humanity, something to do with your blackness. Because no matter how dumb or smart a white child is, he is born into that world, but you, a black child, smart or dumb, you’re born into this,and smart or dumb, you’ll die in it.” (Cry Freedom)

In his account of the black child’s encounter with the white world, Biko crystallizes conceptions of two distinct physical spaces. One, containing “these streets and these houses”, is characterized by squalor, violence and poverty. The other, containing “their streets, their cars, their houses” is characterized by manifestations of wealth and privilege.

Biko asserts that, when confronted with the contrast between the two spaces, a black man associates the “inhumanity” of the conditions in his space with his blackness. Further, when Biko comments on the different worlds that black and white children are born into, he refers not just to a world of privileges, but also to a disparate set of physical spaces which neither is likely ever to leave, other than “to shop” or “to work” in the case of the black child. In this sense, physical space was woven into the very fabric of what it meant to be black or white.

Social commentator and urban design critic James Kunstler reminds us that the design and condition of our cities tell us who we are, where we’ve been, where we hope to go. The same is true of a city’s subdivisions, wards and neighborhoods like the one in DC where I grew up.

What the regal, crumbling old houses told us was that we inherited the discards of more worthy people; that they’d abandoned this decaying history to pursue another, separate from ours.

And the public housing tenements that rose up alongside them - bleak, square and imposing as they were - told us that we were tiny, divorced from history and nature, and going nowhere.

Shops with glass two inches thick separating black patron from yellow proprietor and the eerie absence of palatable public gathering places, complete the frame. All of this suggests most insidiously to a malleable young mind “that they deserve their history”, and their present.

-Tariq

(Source: notime4yourshit)

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Institutionalizing “Lois”

A couple months back I stumbled upon an essay by Malcom Gladwell titled ‘Six Degrees of Lois Weisberg’. In this piece he proposes that certain individuals serve as critical conduits for access to opportunities and resources, and further, that privilege might be measured by the degree to which one has access to these people. The following excerpt sums up the idea: 

If the world really is held together by people like Lois Weisberg, in other words, how poor you are can be defined quite simply as how far you have to go to get to someone like her. Wendy Willrich and Helen Doria and all the countless other people in Lois’s circle needed to make only one phone call. They are well-off. The dropout wouldn’t even know where to start. That’s why he’s poor. Poverty is not deprivation. It is isolation.

Today I read a piece titled “Trusting Families to Help Themselves” in the New York Times which had some interesting, kind of roundabout echoes, of this idea. The story highlights the work of Family Independence Initiative (F.I.I.), “an organization that encourages low-income families to define their own goals and work towards them in mutual support groups, while carefully documenting their successes.” F.I.I. found Maurice Lim Miller gave this example of how the organization interacts with families:

A woman called the office because she had had a car accident and wanted the F.I.I. staff to recommend a lawyer. “The first thing we do is push it back to her and her community,” explained Lim Miller. “We asked, ‘Are there other people you know who have had car accidents? Do you know any of them who got an attorney and were successful?’” The woman couldn’t think of anyone. After a while, she said, “Oh, I babysit for an attorney! And he’s always feeling guilty because he comes home later than he says he will.” She decided that she could ask him for a referral.

I found it really interesting that the program encourages people to think about the architecture of their social networks in a way that surfaces resources, options and opportunities, and personal conduits to them. It seems that an organization like F.I.I. could serve as an institutional “Lois” of sorts to those poor by virtue of isolation.

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Jacob, like the children he would bear, was the very definition of a hard worker. The stereotype of immigrants putting in eighteen hours a day is one that, although it did not begin with him in mind, surely was to be kept alive by him and others like him. There is little doubt that he toiled, and sacrificed, and in the end there was a great payoff indeed.

His children all became moderately successful, at least comfortable-my grandfather would graduate from a prestigious university, Vanderbilt, in 1942-and the family liquor business (more about which later) would grow into something of a fixture in the Nashville, Tennessee, community that the Wise family would ultimately come to call home.

But lest we get carried away, perhaps it would do us all some good to remember a few things about Jacob Wise and his family. None of these things, it must be stressed, take away from the unshakable work ethic that was a defining feature of his character. But they do suggest that a work ethic is rarely, if ever, enough on its own to make the difference.

For after all, there had been millions of black folks with at least as good a work ethic as he; millions of peoples of color-black, brown, red, yellow, and all shades between-who had lived and toiled in this land, typically for far longer than he; and yet they, with few exceptions, could not say that within a mere decade they had become successful shop owners or that one of their sons had gone on to graduate from one of the nation’s finest colleges.

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— Tim Wise, White Like Me

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Privilege Paradox

It is an odd position to be in - an incredibly privileged person trying to afford others some of those same privileges.

One the one hand, I believe that up to a certain point, innovation, creativity and paradigm shifting can bring significantly more people into the circle of privilege without diminishing its benefits to those already in it.

On the other, I believe that we can’t bring about a more just and equitable future without giving up some of the privileges that we current highly value. There is only so much human ingenuity can do to expand the pie, the rest involves expanding our hearts and conceptions of self interest.

This is a question that many generations of social reformers have faced: How much of our own privilege are we willing to give up so that others may realize higher standard of living? Are we really prepared to live, and let our children live on a playing field we have leveled such that it is not in our favor?

In a strange way, we are pining for the age of our own irrelevance.