In the late 1960s racism was specifically defined
as “the predication of decisions and policies on considerations
of race for the purpose of subordinating a racial group and
maintaining control over that group.” In the 21st century this
definition remains essentially intact and correct.
White Americans collectively continue to subordinate
and maintain control over Black people collectively, in addition
to our Red and Brown brothers and sisters. Despite the fact
that some white Americans are in fact economically desperately
poor, more often than not they remain consciously desperately
white; retaining their whiteness as if it and it alone assures
their misperceived superiority over the Black, Brown, and Red
peoples in America and around the world. Thus, any actions taken
by them against us as people of color, be they large or small,
have a built in and fake perception of legitimacy. Such is the
insidious nature of white racism for both the perpetrators and
those being perpetrated upon.
The maintenance of subordination and control
over we Black and other people of color goes far beyond the
brutal and sustained physical component. While it is certainly
accurate that genocide, lynchings, and bloody invasions of sovereign
nation states, etc. by white America is accompanied by enormous
and often unspeakable brutality, the fact of the matter is that
it is the component of mental colonization by white America
of we people of color that assures our continued subordination.
One of the most powerful and devastating forms of mental colonization
in America is the English language itself—or more to the point
the controlling definitions of said language.
The esteemed activist, actor, director, orator,
and artist extraordinaire, the late Ossie Davis, put it this
way in his poignant essay titled, ‘The English Language Is My
Enemy:’ “I will say that language is the primary medium of communication
in the educational process and, in this case, the English language.
I will indict the English language as one of the prime carriers
of racism from one person to another and discuss how the teacher
and the student, especially the Negro student, are affected
by this fact. The English language is my enemy.” In elaborating
upon the psychological aspects of “racism” Davis further
notes: “Racism is a belief that human races have distinctive
characteristics, usually involving the idea that one’s own race
has a right to rule others. Racism. The English language is
my enemy.” Davis goes on to write, “The word ‘blackness’ has
120 synonyms, 60 of which are distinctly unfavorable, and none
of them even mildly positive…In addition, and this is what really
hurts, 20 of those words [excluding the aforementioned 60] are
related directly to race, such as ‘Negro,’ ‘Negress,’ ‘nigger,’
‘darkey,’ ‘blackamoor,’ etc.” Thus, Ossie Davis correctly
and horribly concludes that even “thinking itself is subvocal
speech” which generally requires the use of “words” and if those
words are the “English language for the purpose of communication,”
those using said language are forcing “the Negro child into
60 ways to despise himself [or herself], and the white child,
60 ways to aid and abet” said Black child “in the crime” against
her or himself.
To reiterate: One of the most powerful and devastating
forms of mental colonization in America is the English language
itself—or more to the point the controlling definitions of
said language. The so-called conservatives and liberals alike
of white America are well aware of this, and often actually
count on it. Mental colonization of we Black, Brown, and Red
peoples assures the continuance of our physical subordination
and control.
Thus, it came as no surprise when earlier this
week, I heard the white person hosting a nationally syndicated,
so called liberal/progressive radio/television news program
from New York City, blithely and whimsically engage in devastating
white racist language as she referred to the despicable, bloody,
and exploitative “legacy” of a US fruit company in Central and
South America, as a “dark one.” A dark legacy
indeed! Clearly, as a professional journalist she knows
and knew the power of the language of her words; “bananas” or
other fruit notwithstanding. This was certainly not the first
time she had engaged in such linguistic lynching. Nevertheless,
to all the millions upon millions of “dark” people in America
and throughout the world, and most especially to our
beautiful “dark” youth; let us remind them of their dignity
and their worth. Let us remind them--and each other--that our
darkness is an asset, not a negative. Any person
or people who constantly and consciously use color [i.e.
’dark,’ ‘black,’ etc.] as an equation of evil or negativity
are themselves not worthy of the trust or alliance of our with
people of color.
We are, as Curtis Mayfield sang, the
“people who are darker than blue.” We are dark but we
are not evil or negative, nor will we allow white America’s
liberals (masquerading as progressives) or conservatives to
cunningly reinforce negative emotional and mental stereotypes
under the guise of being our allies.
It is difficult enough for we Black, Brown, and
Red peoples to consistently work at decolonizing our own minds
and those of our youth, without the guileful machinations of
those white liberals who go about the business of reinforcing
mental colonization while pretending to be concerned about our
liberation.
The
first and most important step in decolonizing our minds is recognizing
that we are, and have quite deliberately been, mentally colonized.
This process of mental decolonization can, like a prairie fire,
be very rapid once it begins. There is enormous cause for hope,
and it is only we ourselves who are best suited to bring about
our own liberation, which ultimately will positively affect
the liberation of the entire world. Sisters and brothers, let’s
hold on to each other’s hopes and dreams as we struggle forward
to keep on keeping it real. We can do this because we
must…
BlackCommentator.com Columnist Larry Pinkney is a veteran of the Black
Panther Party, the former Minister of Interior of the Republic
of New Africa, a former political prisoner and the only American
to have successfully self-authored his civil/political rights
case to the United Nations under the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights. Click
here to contact Mr. Pinkney.