I’ll go first.

The first time I realized I was racist was in the summer of 1998. Ironically, my best friend at the time was Marshall Gaskin, a big, black, beautiful man: a gentle giant and an incredible artist. We lived in adjacent buildings in an artist’s co-op just outside of Toronto. I’m grateful for having known him, for he was a major influence in my life. Sadly, he is no longer with us.

One day at the co-op, I was going through the underground parking lot and came across a young black man leaning on a car door towards a young white woman seated on the other side of the open window. Without hesitation, I pointedly looked at the woman and asked,” Are you alright”? She nodded, and I walked away.

My stomach turns at the memory of it. Who the fuck was I to presume that this woman was in trouble. The same feeling I had the next day, upon realizing what I had implied to a complete stranger.

More and more, I became acutely aware of my racism. Like the time I was in an elevator with three black men much larger than me. I noticed that I felt uncomfortable, and my heart started to pound. Faster. Faster. I thought, “What the fuck. This is racism! If these were three white guys, I would be cracking jokes.” After leaving the elevator I was grateful that I could see through the bullshit. I’ve extracted and examined most of my racist moments, and although I think I will always be racist to some minor degree, I acknowledge that any is too much.

I write this because I recently recounted a story that my mother told me to a group of friends. It was a story that my uncle would often repeat about a souvenir tin plate from Niagara Falls. I realize now that this wasn’t a story about something my uncle purchased. It was a racial slur wrapped in a story that he could tell over and over again. I never liked that he enjoyed making fun of minorities, and yet here I was … participating.

I write this because I am sorry.

I write this because I’m ashamed.

I write this for Marshall.

I miss you buddy.

  • JayDee
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    edit-2
    18 days ago

    It’s complicated. It’s understandable to view internal prejudices as racist when they make your heart rate spike just from being flanked by black folks. That’s absolutely profiling and assuming danger based on skin color. Same goes for seeing a white Lady with a black man and assuming she might be in danger. That’s not just racist, that’s a bit sexist as well.

    These types of profiling are happening by us all the time, and I think they’re actually a vital heuristic in how we socialize. We just need to introspect as you’ve done to figure out how much they are helpful to ourselves and how much they are harmful to others.

    Think of the case of seeing a child unattended. Sure, the kid could be fine, completely competent at navigating around town by themselves. That does not mean that you check yourself regarding the bad vibes you get from it. You check on the kid.

    We also constantly use these heuristics to avoid bad situations, where we suspect maybe a mugging, maybe scam, or something else. We simply don’t know and we use different types of profiling to keep ourselves safe. We’ve just also been wrongly taught that race has some bearing on our safety when it doesn’t.

    Alot of folks also have bad profiling practices when it comes to poverty and homelessness, and that’s gotta be addressed too.