(suggested music pairing: Skin I'm In, Cameo)
This month is Black History Month. What does that mean to me?
Why is it important?
In my opinion, Black History Month exists in order to acknowledge,
and bring to consciousness, all of the struggles that African Americans had to endure
in American history; to highlight the measures taken by many individuals to
help break that prevailing wisdom for the entire group; and to celebrate some
of the accomplishments achieved in spite of those conditions.
I use the term African-American in this context, as I am
focused on peoples of an African descent living within America. I am not normally
as selective in my choice of terms, but in this case, I want to remain specific
to this subset of peoples.
As a group of people, African Americans who lived during
this period of oppression, which I define loosely as the 1600’s (when the first
slave ships started sailing to what would become America), to the 1960s, are in
a unique category. The definition of oppression in the Merriam-Webster dictionary
is “unjust or cruel exercise of authority or power “. I’m
going to add to that definition; where that exercise of power led to a denial
of basic rights and freedoms under the fear or threat of injury or death.
Many groups of people have been oppressed in history, and
each group’s circumstances are different. Women’s oppression was for a longer
period of time (well back in European history), but the threat of death in
general wasn’t as pronounced. The height of Jewish oppression was for a much
shorter period of time, but death was more than a threat. (I strongly recommend
visiting the National Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC…it is a very intense
experience.) However, in many cases you cannot necessarily look at a person and
instantly tell they are Jewish. Other groups of people coming to America (Asian
Americans and Latin Americans) were generally not brought here against their
will, and did not have to endure slavery, but still had to ensure
oppression. The point of comparing is
just for the sake of comparing and contrasting; to recognize that each group of
oppressed people had their own circumstances and battles to overcome, and some
similarities can be drawn with them all. The point is not to stack rank each
group to determine which group comes out on top as “most oppressed.” The more
we acknowledge, highlight, and celebrate the struggles humans have had to
endure and overcome, and the more we move forward, the more we can ensure that
we don’t need to keep adding to the list of groups.
I’m not going to get into any deep discussions of any specifics
of Black History. When I look at Black History, here is my definition of Black
History within the timeframe I specified above: a group of people who were betrayed by their
own kind, brought somewhere against their will, and forced to work in unhealthy
conditions against their will. This all occurred in an environment where
freedom was proclaimed and celebrated but denied for generations. This all occurred in an environment where to
crack under pressure was to be killed, or sent somewhere else, against their
will, to some other place similar or worse. And this occurred for generations,
without promise, without an end in sight. Grandparents and grandkids knew no
different. Assuming the family unit was kept together, when more often than
not, it wasn’t. And even as their government (not of their choice) proclaimed
their freedom, their government didn’t put any practices in place for another
several generations, so as they gained one freedom, another freedom was taken
away. And all that was done based on outward appearance, and usually outward
appearance alone.
Take a second to try to imagine that.
And within that circumstance, within all of that,
individuals fought overwhelming odds and great personal sacrifice to stand up and take lifelong journeys,
unselfishlessly, to fight. The names that all get equated with Black History Month,
the Rosa Parks, the Frederick Douglasses, Dr. King, Malcolm X, Harriet Tubman,
Stokely Carmichael, and dozens of other recognizable names, and hundreds of
relatively unknown names, all looked death in the eye and still said “Enough.” No
Internet, no automobiles, no protection, no assurances – walking hundreds of
miles, spending nights in jail, physically assaulted and attacked, spit on, shot at, and
killed.
THAT…THAT needs to be remembered. And learned from. And we
all need these reminders. And in each oppressed group, there are examples of
the same kinds of people, both in American History and World History. Those are roads we do not need to travel down again.
____________________
“Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it”
- George Santayana (Spanish born American Philosopher, Poet, 1863-1952)
“Know from whence you came. If you know whence you came,
there are absolutely no limitations to where you can go.” - James Arthur
Baldwin (American Essayist, Playwright and Novelist, 1924-1987)
First of all I agree with what you wrote and the quotes. Sadly today many fail to look at history let alone learn from it. The one sad thing I find about Black History Month or Black history in general is the number of black people who choose to basically piss on the memories and efforts of those that came before them and instead much rather act to a stereotype. I'm not saying it is 100% of the people but even if it is 1% who choose to do so it is way too much. Sorry for what could be perceived as racist overtones to that statement that is not my intent.
ReplyDeleteYou know I COMPLETELY AGREE. Completely.
ReplyDelete