Last year, when I read this excerpt from Daniel Hill’s book White Awake, I didn’t disagree but I also didn’t understand.
White supremacy attacks the humanity of every living being. It attacks the personhood of people of color by promoting a hateful view that they are sub-human. It attacks the personhood of white people by promoting a hateful view that they are super-human. The enemy is not each other. It is the system of white supremacy and the evil one who leverages it for destructive purposes. We all need to have our humanity restored and re-calibrated to what and who God says we are.
Last month, an experience in my “white” son’s life taught me, on a visceral level as a mother, how dangerous white supremacy is for all of us.
If you were to put our family of four on a racial spectrum it would look like this:
Previously not understanding the danger racism is for everyone, I naively worried more about my daughter, since she looks more Asian, than my son. She was the focus of my efforts to educate through documentaries, movies and news articles. But last month that changed.
In June, my kids tagged along with me to an apartment complex where I coordinated a church group moving a family into their new apartment. It was in an affordable housing complex in what is, for Denver, a diverse part of town.
After an hour of sticking around the big group, my son floated off with another boy he’d just met to the basketball courts. Twenty minutes later, he returned telling me about how an older, black teenager had flashed him the gun in his waistband as he stepped onto the court to play. My son was adamant that it was a warning for him alone because he looks white. Wisely, he was slow to exit the scene so as not to alarm the teenager or look like a snitch and after a few minutes made an excuse about being hungry and wanting to get something to eat. His new friend followed him back to our picnic.
You could tell my son’s story in a way that makes it about the danger of “rough” neighborhoods, the availability of guns in the “ghetto”, territorial gang behavior, or violent tendencies in black communities. But what if it’s really about America’s history of redlining communities of color, safety for black bodies when first responders aren’t allies, communal protection under oppression and how racism breeds fear of white bodies in black communities?
Though it took several hours after we were home for the adrenaline to leave my body, my version isn’t one of a black thug with a gun endangering my son’s life. That young man is also another woman’s son who in his efforts to feel safe, yields something that is more effective than a 911 call. I’m relieved for both my son and that young man, whose face I never saw, that nothing happened that day.
Being white in America today equates to privilege, power and wealth which means we experience only a fraction of the trauma communities of color face daily, but it does not make us safe from nor invincible against the dangers of racism.