A Firsthand Report on #BlackLivesMatter and Bernie Sanders
By Susan DuFresne.
Originally posted on http://www.livingindialogue.com/a-firsthand-report-on-blacklivesmatter-and-bernie-sanders/
I was there. I was there to hear Bernie speak at Westlake in
Seattle yesterday.
To get it out in the open, I am a white ally and still
learning, still reflecting, still processing what happened yesterday in
Seattle, when Black Lives Matter (BLM) protestors took over the stage at the
Sanders event.blm0
I was close to the stage and watched it unfold. It would be
unfair to say that all whites were booing. It would be unfair to say that the
crowd that was there to hear Bernie are all white supremacists. It would be
accurate to say we are all playing a part in a system of institutional racism
and that for too long, we have let it slide. We haven’t done enough to end it.
What happened was interesting in a crowd of mostly whites,
many elderly, many Baby Boomers… Because the event was about social security.
People of color seemed to be at least half of the speakers and musical parts of
the program. I don’t know if BLM was invited in advance. Security was very
light. Almost absent.
I have been to many protests there, even co-organized them
and there has been more of a police presence at other events, yet THIS was a
MUCH bigger crowd. In fact I didn’t see police there at Westlake yesterday
until AFTER the BLM group disrupted Bernie’s speech. Even then, they stood back
from the event on their bikes.
When the BLM group began to disrupt it was interesting to
observe the crowd. I was there with a group of teachers. We stood next to a
group of nurses. Some in our group have participated in seeking cultural
competency training from Denisha Jones and have participated as white allies in
BLM events. I was wearing my arm band from a Black Students Lives Matter event
as my hat band — which I got at a Feb. 6 protest in Seattle, where I, with
other teachers, used civil disobedience to block rush hour traffic by laying in
the crosswalk at Westlake for 4 1/2 minutes to signify the importance of the
life and the death of Michael Brown.
The crowd’s response showed they had mixed feelings about
the BLM disruption as an act of civil disobedience. Some had traveled far to
hear Bernie speak. Some did boo. But many also chanted “Let HER speak! Let HER
speak!” Many of us whites were telling the other whites who were booing or
talking during the time BLM was trying to speak to be quiet and let her speak.
Whites in the crowd were shushing other whites to give her time and respect. I
was one of the whites doing this. I said to others close by to give her
respect. I was embarrassed by those who were disrespectful. I was proud that
most were respectful and I was appreciative that Bernie and the organizers were
giving them time, space, and respect. Bernie worked the crowd using nonverbal
language to demand respect for them on several occasions, calming the crowd. At
other times I could see he was frustrated, but that came later…
Marissa (I believe that is her name) asked for 4 1/2 minutes
to honor Michael Brown. The crowd was not perfect, but for the majority this
crowd gave this request and Michael Brown that 4 1/2 minutes of respect. I
don’t recall if Marissa said she would then yield the stage to Bernie as she was
setting up the 4 1/2 minutes or if it was inferred by the crowd. Many in the
crowd held their fists up in the air for Michael Brown, many bowed their heads,
and the great majority was in fact silent.
Still, some were rude and some of us continued to call those
not being silent out on their rudeness.
Friends next to me joined in to tell others who were not
quiet to “Check your white privilege.”
Then, Marissa & BLM did not yield the stage to Bernie.
People of color who were organizers of the event tried to reason with the BLM
group. A group next to me began chanting “Shame! Shame!”
Again, I felt embarrassed being white. I felt shame. Many in
the crowd at this point – and myself included chanted at this point – “Let
Bernie speak!” I felt at that point it would have been powerful for the BLM
group’s movement to return the stage to him, but even while joining this
particular chant at this moment, I was asking myself if I could be wrong. As an
organizer myself, I think in this crowd the BLM group may have built their
movement by doing so. That said, I leave room for myself to be wrong as like I
said, I am still processing and learning.
I think some of us, including me at times forget: This isn’t
about us white people. This movement is about #BlackLivesMatter. This group
wasn’t asking for space. They were taking it. That made some of us feel
uncomfortable because we were in a position of giving up some of that white
privilege for 15 minutes and the white privilege of hearing a white politician
speak… White allies, let’s remember to check our own white privilege.
All media attention centered now on Marissa & the BLM
group. As you know they have made mainstream media over their actions of civil
disobedience. What did this do? What did they gain or lose? What was their
purpose? Who am I to judge I wondered?
I realize no matter what, I am always looking through the
filter of my white experiences. Yes, racism is institutionalized. It is a
social structure built for maintaining power over a select group of fellow humans
based on skin color and a sense of entitlement. The only tool I have is to look
through a human lens, to emotion and tie what I am seeing to a personal
experience.
I grew up in an abusive household with parents who had
alcoholism. They used their size and strength to take physical power over me.
My father used this power to strip me of any sense of personal self or dignity.
I was only allowed to have opinions that were in accord with his opinions. As a
result, I didn’t have any power in my own home. I felt a sense of utter
hopelessness for me and my siblings (I was the oldest and could not protect
them from harm. I felt like a failure. I felt it was my responsibility.) Yet in
all of that abuse, I still lived a life of white privilege. I drew on those
experiences yesterday as I observed what was unfolding.
What I drew upon to analyze the anger, the despair, and the
outrage I witnessed and the personal pain shared by Marissa is from my own
personal experience of times when I have felt so much anger, so much despair. I
have been in a similar emotional space before. I have never, however lived an
entire lifetime without my white privilege. But in this case, as a white ally,
I also felt my own white privilege: I felt something I have as a white ally
that Marissa and the Blacks in America might not have. I felt HOPE. And I
realized HOPE is a privilege. What disrupting Bernie and the BLM movement may
accomplish is HOPE. I may be wrong.
What happened next was Bernie came around and shook my hand,
looking me in the eye, reading my hat “Black Students Lived Matter” and smiling
amidst all that stress. His actions took some of the sting away for those who
were angry at not being able to hear him speak. The crowd could have ignited.
The organizers could have called in the police. The police could have forcibly
removed the BLM group from the stage. In the 60’s I am ashamed to say, dogs and
fire hoses would likely have been used, if not weapons. That didn’t happen
yesterday in Seattle. Instead the stage was occupied and Bernie’s speech was
disrupted. Was that enough to give the BLM a small shot of hope?
I went to Bernie’s 2nd speech. He front loaded by adding
Symone Sanders, an eloquent Black activist and chairperson of the Youth
Commission on Juvenile Justice and supporter of the BLM movement added to his
campaign- and the person to introduce Bernie last night.
She and Bernie both inspired the 12,000 mostly white allies
to their feet in standing ovations FOR the Black Lives Matter movement. This
was electrifying. I wish Marissa and her group were there to see it.
But again, Bernie told us to think BIG. That a president
alone cannot make these sweeping changes. That institutional racism and
economic inequality are parallel problems that need to both be addressed. Does
that give those in the BLM movement hope?
I realize a standing ovation isn’t enough. But inspiration
from being in a crowd who take that first step gives this white ally hope. Now,
how do we translate that hope into action and law? Into reality and a
shattering of institutional racism? How do we make amends for the years of
abuse through racism? How do we heal as a nation from a history of slavery when
right wing and even Democratic neoliberal policies are recreating slavery? What
actions are white allies willing to take to destroy the oligarchy and along
with it, institutional racism? What white privileges are we willing to part
with? What are you willing to do to give the BLM movement space and to really
listen to their needs, wants, and hopes as fellow humans?
While the initial response from Bernie Sanders to the
disruption of his Seattle event was disappointing, today his web site published
a much lengthier statement on racial justice (link here) that begins to
acknowledge the depth of this issue. This statement speaks to the actions we
must take as a nation. Much work remains to be done by the Sanders campaign,
but it appears to have begun.
Susan Dufresne teaches kindergarten in the Seattle area.
Photographs are by the author, and used with permission.
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