January 13, 2014
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A week after Barack Obama was elected president in 2008, I walked into my old hometown bar in central Florida to hear, "Well if a nigger can be president, then I can have another drink. Give me a whiskey straight up."
Only one day in the town and I thought, "Damn the south."
I
had returned home to bury my father, who had spent much of the 1950s
and '60s fighting for civil rights in the south. Consequently, my
childhood was defined by race. It was why our car was shot at, why
threats were made to burn our house down, why some neighbors forbid me
to play on their lawn, why I was taunted at school as a "nigger lover".
It was nothing compared to what the blacks in town had to endure. I was just residing in the seam of something much uglier.
It is also why I left as soon as I could, exercising an option few others had. I eventually moved to New York City to work on Wall Street.
In
the next 15 years I thought less about race. It is possible to live in
the northeast as a white liberal and think little about it, to convince
yourself that most of the crude past is behind. Outward signs suggest
things are different now: I live in an integrated neighborhood, my kids
have friends of all colors, and my old office is diverse compared to
what I grew up with. As many point out, America even has a black man
(technically bi-racial) as president.
Soon
after my father passed away, I started to venture beyond my Wall Street
life, to explore parts of New York that I had only previously passed
through on the way to airports. I did this with my camera,
initially as a hobby. I ended up spending three years documenting
addiction in the New York's Bronx neighborhood of Hunts Point. There I
was slapped in the face by the past.
In
my Florida hometown, there is a train track that splits the town into
two colors. When we passed into the black section of town, even if I
were lying in the back of the station wagon, I knew it. The gravel roads
would wake me, and I could basically smell poverty through the windows.
Crossing
into Hunts Point in New York is the same, complete with a train track.
The roads are paved, but feel unpaved. The stench of poverty has not
changed much (industrial waste rather than uncollected garbage), nor has
its clamor or its destructive power.
Neither has the color of its residents: the poor side of town in New York is still almost entirely dark skinned.
It
took me a few months of slow recognition, fighting a thought I did not
want to believe: we are still a deeply racist country. The laws on the
books claim otherwise, but in Hunts Point (and similar neighborhoods
across the country), those laws seem like far away idyllic words that
clash with the daily reality: everything is stacked against those who
are born black or brown.
We
as a nation applaud ourselves for having moved beyond race. We find one
or two self-made blacks or Hispanics who succeeded against terrible
odds, and we elevate their stories to a higher position, and then we
tell them over and over, so we can say, "See, we really are a color
blind nation."
We
tell their stories so we can forget about the others, the ones who
couldn't overcome the long odds, the ones born into neighborhoods locked
down by the absurd war on drugs, the ones born with almost even odds
that their fathers will at some point be in jail, the ones born into
neighborhoods that few want to teach in, neighborhoods scarce of
resources.
We
tell the stories of success and say: see anyone can pull themselves up
by their bootstraps, further denigrating those who can't escape poverty.
It plays into the false and pernicious narrative that poverty is
somehow a fault of desire, a fault of intelligence, a fault of skills.
No, poverty is not a failing of the residents of Hunts Point who are
just as decent and talented as anyone else. Rather it is a failing our broader society.
It took me seeing one black teen thrown against a bodega wall by cops,
for no reason, to erase much of the image of seeing Obama elected. It
took the unsolved murder of a 15-year-old Hunts Point girl, a girl my
middle daughter's age, to make me viscerally understand how lucky my
children are. It took watching as one smart child grew from dreaming of
college to dealing drugs to viscerally understand how lucky everyone in
my old office is.
The
barriers between Hunts Point and the rest of New York are not as high
as they were between the white and black section of my hometown in the
1960s. People can freely pass over them. Practically, however, they are
almost insurmountable.
Gone is the overt, violent, and legal racism of my childhood. It has been replaced by a subtler version.
It is a racism that is easier to ignore, easier to deny, and consequently almost as dangerous.
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