The writer with his son. Photo courtesy of Calvin Hennick.
In the days after the Michael Brown shooting, I wrote an essay titled “I Hope My Son Stays White,”
detailing my fears about what might happen to my biracial
three-year-old son if he grows up to have dark skin. The upshot:
America, to its shame, is still a place where black males are feared,
and I don’t want that fear to turn itself on my son in a way that leads
to his arrest or death.
I published the piece on
Ebony.com, and the reactions from black readers ranged from “sad but
true” to allegations that I myself was engaging in the very racism and
colorism that I was decrying. But buried among these was a comment from a
white reader who accused me of “sucking up to black folk” and then went
on to list the supposed advantages of being black in America.
(Apparently, according to this reader, my son will have an unearned fast
track to a career as an air traffic controller. Um, okay?)
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I can’t help but think that, if
the essay had been published in an outlet with a larger white
readership, many more commenters would have chimed in to deny the
continued existence of racism. In my experience, white people (and
straight people, and male people, and Christian people — all groups of
which I’m a member) tend to dismiss the notion that we’re privileged.
It’s an uncomfortable thing to acknowledge that you’re the recipient of
unfair benefits, especially when those benefits are often nearly
invisible to those who receive them.
But when you’re a parent, those privileges stop being invisible. It’s the reason why male congressmen with daughters are more likely to support women’s issues. It’s the reason why Ohio Sen. Rob Portman suddenly declared his support for same-sex marriage
after his son came out as gay. And it’s the reason why, everywhere I
look, I see hassles that my son will have to face that I don’t. Here’s a
partial list of things I can take for granted, but which will likely be
problematic for my son:
1. I Can Walk Through a Store Without Being Followed
To take one high-profile instance, Macy’s and the city of New York recently settled with actor Robert Brown, who was handcuffed, humiliated, and accused of committing credit card fraud after buying an expensive watch at the store.
I never have to worry about this happening to me.
2. I Can Succeed Without It Being Attributed to My Race
When my wife, who is black,
received her acceptance letter from Boston College, a peer told her she
must have gotten in due to affirmative action, effectively ruining the
experience of receiving the letter.
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When I succeed, people assume I’ve earned it.
3. I Learned About My Ancestors’ History in School
I can tell you all about Louis
XIV, Socrates, and the Magna Carta, but I always wondered when we would
finally learn about African history (beyond Pharaohs and pyramids). The
subject never came up.
4. I Can Lose My Temper in Traffic
Once, an acquaintance who got
into a confrontation while driving told me how scared she was of the
other driver, describing him as a “big black guy.” When I get heated, no
one attributes it to my race.
5. I Can Loiter in Wealthy Neighborhoods
No one has ever called the cops on me to report a “suspicious person.” My wife can’t say the same.
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6. I Can Complain About Racism
When I point out that black
people are incarcerated at alarming rates, or largely forced to send
their children to underperforming schools, or face systemic
discrimination when searching for jobs and housing, no one accuses me of
“playing the race card.”
7. I Can Count on Being Met on My Own Terms
If I’m being treated poorly, I
don’t stop and think about whether it’s due to my race. But unless we
somehow make a giant leap forward, my son will always have to wonder.
Recently, I became a father for
the second time. My daughter, only three months old, will grow up to
face many of the same challenges as my son, on top of the extra ones
that come with being a woman: the struggle for equal pay, the
catcalling, the constant threat of sexual assault.
I don’t want to give my children
a complex about all of this, but I can’t wish these problems away,
either. I can’t eliminate all the unfair hurdles that exist in the
world. I can only do my best to raise kids who are able to jump over
them. https://www.yahoo.com/parenting/7-things-i-can-do-that-my-black-son-cant-99408985077.html
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