Replace the capitalist globalization of racism, greed and violence with the globalization of generosity, equality, justice, truth, wisdom, compassion and love. |
My husband stands by Black Lives Matter written in roadway witnessing growing crowds |
Thousands were gathered listening to speakers in front of and near Portland's Justice Center |
Moms for Racial Equality |
These photos are but a tiny glimpse into the protests on July 21st occurring in
front of the federal buildings in Portland.
During
the silent protest that my husband and I participated in beforehand
at Portland City Hall, it came to me more powerfully and deeply than
ever before that I truly don’t know what it’s like being Black —
or Indigenous or other people of color — in America. I don’t know
what it feels like to live the American nightmare because I am white
and have not had that lived experience.
I’m
humbled. My heart hurts. I weep. And I feel myself once again being
changed as I seek to recognize, understand, and see with the eyes of
my heart what I’ve been blind to and therefore unknowingly
complicit with. I’m determined to learn how to be antiracist by
peeling back the countless layers of my indoctrination into racism.
No small task.
So
when people question why I’m showing up to these rallies and
identifying as part of BLM, why I’m reading How to Be an Antiracist
by Ibram Kendi and researching every day, why I’m writing and speaking up and
sharing what I am learning, it’s because of my commitment to
extricate myself from the problem and become increasingly and
authentically empowered to be part of the solution. For too long I’ve
been blind to how I’ve been complicit with the racism I’ve
ingested growing up in America.
When
people say that’s all well and good, but you’re also supporting
violence and rioting, I come back to the words of Ibram Kendi —
where has our outrage been at the violence and looting directed at
Black Americans for the past 400 years?? Where have I been when these
grave and deadly injustices have been perpetrated on people of color
for the whole of our nation’s history?
The
answer is that I’ve been is ignorant, propagandized, and complicit.
But now yet another deep ingrained layer of the fog of my denial and
illusions is being lifted. And I’m starting to get it. I’M
STARTING TO GET IT! Every day I experience more of what has always been happening. And I'm allowing this conscious awareness to penetrate my heart.
And so of
course there’s rage at our federal government. Of course! And who
the hell do I think I am to point fingers of judgment and
condemnation at those suffering the rage that’s built up over the
span of centuries at living, not the American Dream, but the American
Nightmare?! I can no longer engage in the racism implicit in these
judgments.
And for anyone as unaware of the American nightmare as I have been, please read this piece by Ibram Kendi: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/06/american-nightmare/612457/.
Instead
of being complicit and enabling the racism built into the power structures and systems, the cultural stories and belief systems, the actions or lack of actions, the policies and politics of my country, today I choose to stand in every way that I can with oppressed peoples and join them in demanding
NO MORE! BLACK LIVES MATTER! DEEP SYSTEMIC CHANGES ARE VITALLY NEEDED
AND SO VERY LONG OVERDUE.
I don't do any of this perfectly. There's not a switch that I can switch and one day I'm engaged in racism and the next I'm now 100% antiracist. Transformation and growing into greater consciousness is not that simple or easy. Not at all. Rather, from one moment and one day to the next my intentions and choices, my thoughts and beliefs, my actions or lack of actions illuminate where I fall on the racist_____antiracist continuum. I seek daily, as best as I can, to embody being an antiracist and to be committed to the ongoing process of shedding the layers of indoctrination into racism which have poisoned my mind, my heart, my soul.
We are all one human family, interrelated and interconnected. And we are all needed to be part of this great universal struggle for racial, social,
economic, and environmental justice.
Molly
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