Thursday, July 23, 2020
Black Lives Matter
Black Lives Matter Warning: Before reading this post, be aware that it contains extremely strong language. It was the only way I could write it honestly, the only way I could bring words to my feelings. ** I moved to the United States of America three years ago. Packed all my belongings into four luggage bags, rolled into a car with my five siblings and my mom and my dad. Suddenly, I was at the airport, hugging everyone as tightly as I could. Suddenly I was on the other side of the line, separated from my family by a sign that read âONLY PASSENGERS BEYOND THIS POINTâ. Suddenly, I was on a plane, my country shrinking beneath me, until the cars were ants and the buildings were little toy models. I was sad, but I was also excited. Up until then, Iâd only seen America through the lens of blockbuster Hollywood movies. It was beautiful, wondrous, exciting. The possibilities were infinite. I was filled with boyish wonder, and I was ready for my grand adventure. Since then, Iâve met a lot of people here, and when small chatter invariably leads to them finding out Iâm from Nigeria, they ask variations of the same question: âHow do you like it here?â and âIs Nigeria different from America?â Yes it is. Itâs dryer and hotter, hot enough that weâre always making the same lame old jokes about cooking meat on the pavements. The food is wildly different. In Nigeria, food is abacha and achicha and eba and fufu and egusi and suya. In America, food is burger and pasta and coleslaw and pizza and fries and Coca-Cola in three cup sizes. And in Nigeria, virtually everyone has the same dark skin. Sure, thereâs a substantial number of white people and Asians and a tapestry of races, but mostly, weâre black. And because weâre mostly black, âbeing blackâ was never a term that was part of my daily vocabulary. You were tall or short or fat or skinny or intelligent or a complete and utter idiot, but you werenât black. It was as weird as saying âyouâre humanâ. But by my first week in this country, that word popped up a lot. In orientation, I learned about the Black Student Union. On the news, the word âblackâ seemed to pop up with surprising regularity. A lot of my newly made African-American friends would jokingly respond to my shocking love of country music with, âYouâre black! Whereâs your Kendrick Lamar? Your J. Cole?â The word âblackâ got more weight and I wasnât quite sure how to deal with it. Mostly, I didnât know if I had any ârightâ to consider myself black. The word referred to African-Americans right? And I was African. Was there a distinction between being black and being African? I spent most of my time afloat in the comforting bubble of MIT, so it didnât really matter. I had psets to punt, midterms to whine about, shows to binge-watch on my down time, and while the concept of blackness sometimes seeped into my thoughts, I decided it ultimately didnât really matter. As that corny-ass saying goes, âThe only race that matters is the human race.â If only. A few months here, and I decided to go to the post office. I canât remember why; I think it had something to do with my passport. But after Iâm done at the post office, Iâm walking down Central Square feeling pretty good. The sun is starting to set, and Boston is strangely not showing its bipolar sleeves this evening. Not too hot, not too cold. Thereâs a nice wind even. Iâm almost at my dorm when I hear someone screaming, âHey! HEY!â I turn around to see a heavyset, middle-aged white man racing toward me. I start to panick. Iâm clumsy as hell so I probably dropped my ID card or my debit card on the sidewalk, and he spotted it. I reach into my pockets, but even as Iâm tapping around and feeling both cards secure and in place, I start to realize something is wrong because his face is contorted in rage, and heâs not approaching me in the âHey, you dropped thisâ kinda way. Heâs approaching me in the âYou utter piece of shitâ kind of way. Next thing I know, his arms are around my shirt, and heâs shaking me and telling me to confess. âI saw you!â he says. âI saw you grab her wallet. Where is it? Where is it?â Heâs screaming in my face. I notice one of the MBTA buses parked by the side of the road, but only vaguely, because my head is somewhere else, adrift in confusion, and as it sinks in what heâs accusing me of, and as he begins to say âwhy canât you niggersâ, I completely lose it. I start to scream at him. I start to push him off. I start to yell about calling the police. âCall the police!â he tells me. âCall them right now.â Weâre interrupted by someone hanging out the bus, yelling at us to get our attention. Itâs another man and heâs saying, âYou got the wrong guy! You got the wrong guy!â For whatever reason, the man holding me chooses to believe him. He lets me go. Without saying a worda single wordhe turns around and begins to walk toward the bus. I stand there, stunned, waiting to see if heâll say anything, but he keeps walking, and in a tone so unlike mine, I yell profanities at him until heâs in the bus and out of sight. I turn around, and people are staring at me. Their expressions are variations of a themeannoyed, judgmental, concerned. I keep walking into my dorm, shaking with such anger. When Iâm in my room, I almost cry. But I force myself not to. All I see is that manâs pink bloated face as he screams in my ears, âWhy canât you niggersâ ** I donât know why Iâm writing this. Iâm not quite sure what I hoped to achieve when I sat in front of my computer and began typing. But thirty minutes ago, I was looking through Facebook comments, on a news post about a man named Philando Castille, and the comments are going âWhy do black people never protest black-on-black crime?â and âThey always look for ways to play the victim.â Iâm thinking of the video of Philando leaking blood, and Iâm thinking of his girlfriend trying to stay calm and Iâm thinking of their kid in the back seat. And Iâm staring at these comments. Someone has just put up a meme of a lady staring intensely at a laptop; the meme is captioned, âThere Must Be Some Way This Victimizes Me.â And I want to post a reply. I want so badly to say, âSHUT UP! SHUT THE FUCK UP BECAUSE YOU DONâTYOU ABSOLUTELY DO NOT KNOW WHAT THE FUCK YOUâRE TALKING ABOUT.â But it would never be enough to type it. I wanna scream it at their faces. I wanna reach through my screen and grab them by the heads and shake them like ragdolls and tell them to shut UP. FOR ONCE. Iâve been in America for three years, and I feel wholly underqualified to speak about matters like this. In Nigeria, they floated past my radar, so why take them on now? I donât know. I canât hide under some fancy little idea that thereâs a barrier between black and Africanbecause what matters to these peopleyou know who these people areis that they can take one look at the color of your skin, and populate their minds with the entire backstory of you. They can take one look at you, and before theyâre even looking away, theyâve put youtheyâve put usin this mental catalogue. Itâs this dreamy little world where thugs and criminals and menacing and lazy lives. I go on my NewsFeed and I see my black friends post. Theyâre tired. This same old shit. This same old story. Only difference is the face this time. Theyâre upset. Theyâre heartbroken. The names keep growing, the protests continue. Someone hits reset. And here we are again. ** Dontre Hamilton. Eric Garner. John Crawford III. Michael Brown Junior. Ezell Ford. Akai Gurley. Tamir Rice. Jerame Reid. Tony Robinson. Eric Harris. Walter Scott. Freddie Gray. Sandra Bland. ** Alton Sterling. Philando Castile. ** And Iâm tired too. Iâm tired of living in denial. I tell myself each time that thereâs something Iâm not seeing, that thereâs more to the story. That itâs not hunting season on black people, because why would it be. That the problem is deeper, nuanced, more complicated. But then I see those comments on Facebook. âHe shouldnât have resistedâ and âHe was no angelâ and âAll lives matterâ. Those god-awful comments, made from pedestals of privilege so blinding they think they live in a world where the same rules apply to them. This is the same country that had separate toilets, fountains, buses for âcolored peopleâ. This is the same place where black people were once slaves, property, indistinguishable from land and cows and cutlery. This is the same place where historically black colleges had to be a thing for black people to have any hope of an education. The same place where white Brock Turner gets six months after caught in the act of rape, and black Brian Banks gets imprisoned for five years on a false rape charge. The same place where the black bodies keep piling up, where the executioners stow their guns in their holsters and go home to watch football and live their tidy lives. There is no nuance, there is no complication. There is no subtlety. There is a problem. We feel like dogs. We feel like we donât matter. So the next time someone starts with that bullshitall lives matterIâm gonna resist the urge to kick them in the face, because violence is never the answer. Im gonna think of the ever-growing list of names, and Iâm going to think of Philando Castille, and Iâm going to wonder how all lives matter when their lives didnât, not to those on the other end of the trigger. In a flash, in the same moment it takes to flip a coin, they destroyed decades of hopes, dreams, thoughts of the future, family. They destroy the promise of a life where you can rise from bed in the morning and be reasonably certain of returning to sleep at night. They take away the illusion of safety, of protection. Because youâre a thug and you were resisting and you were never a good father to begin with and you should know better and if only you had complied, if only you had been a model citizen, if only you had followed the law, if only, if only. If only you were anything but black. ** Same old story, ainât it? Thereâs nothing else I can say. Same old story. Only thing that has changed is the face. Rest in peace, Alton. Rest in peace, Philando. And rest in peace, to the names that havenât been added yet, but soon will be. **
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.