It is embarrassing to admit, but when
I was very young, we referred to the large nuts in a can of mixed nuts as “n----r
toes” and when I first learned “eeny, meeny, miny, moe” the next phrase we used
was “catch a n----r by the toe.” I have spoken to enough people to know that this
was not just a peculiarity of my family nor was it unique to Indiana. I suspect many
white people 60 years old and older can remember things like this. It was a
sort of thoughtless, which is not to say innocent, racism.
When
I was still quite young, we suddenly began calling the larger nuts, “Brazil
Nuts” and when we did eeny, meeny, miny, moe, we caught a “tiger” by the toe. I
do not remember any conversation about this, though there might have been. It
would have been during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960’s. I suspect that that
movement awakened a different moral awareness that led my mother and father and others to reassess some
of their language. I am proud of them that they did. To be fair to my folks, I do
not remember ever hearing them use the N-word or words like it to refer to
another human being or group of human beings. Still, I am grateful to the Civil Rights Movement for
enlightening our consciences further.
I
suggest that the things like renaming Aunt Jemima syrup, renaming some sports
teams, and even the removal of some statues is on a par with reforming some of
our vocabulary in the 1960’s. We know of course that racism did not end then.
Its legacy continues. We are being called again, by a new iteration of the
Civil Rights Movement, to further our moral awareness and sensitivity. We are
being challenged to a deeper engagement with and response to the legacy of racism.
It was not a matter of whether or not
those using the N-word to refer to Brazil
Nuts thought we were being racist or intended to be. The word was racist and was offensive. So are things like Aunt Jemima, the Washington Redskins, the Confederate Battle Flag, and Confederate
statues.
Most
– most – of us would not want to go back to using the vocabulary in my first
paragraph. We recognize that it was wrong. We would not say that changing our
vocabulary was political correctness run amok. Rather, it was a response to an awareness of the offensiveness of certain words and a desire to not be racist. It was based in a desire to live what we claimed – that we believed all
people are created equal and are worthy of respect and justice. Most
contemporary Americans believe this, or at least want to believe it. And most of
us want to live it. More and more of us are recognizing that we are not there
yet. We can be grateful to those who today have taken up the mantle of advocating against racism and racist systems and who are inviting all of us to higher moral ground.
Ending racism, which is more deeply embedded in our social, political, and economic structures than we might want to admit, will take more than changing our vocabulary or removing racist names and symbols. But whether we want to admit it or not racism is also embedded in our imaginations. And our imaginations are shaped by such symbols. If we do not want racism to shape our imaginations, one way to move in that direction is to remove them from public display.
See also:
The Heritage of Racism – a Baseball Analogy
Why "Black Lives Matter"
Justice, Wild Justice, and the Plague of Racism
See also:
The Heritage of Racism – a Baseball Analogy
Why "Black Lives Matter"
Justice, Wild Justice, and the Plague of Racism