Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. once wrote, “It may be true that the law cannot
make a man love me, but it can keep him from lynching me, and I think
that's pretty important.” Those students who are protesting campus
racism need to keep that quote in mind as they assert their right to
feel safe and comfortable on campus. When the protests have been
well defined and include an end game, such as the University of
Missouri protests that toppled a President and Chancellor, they have
been effective. When protests broadly address issues like
comfort, they are less successful. And while it is satisfying to
force a President (or a faculty member for that matter) to resign, the
conditions of campus life will not necessarily change because there is
a new leader. Structural racism is so firmly embedded in our
culture that it will take years, if not decades, of focused work and
commitment to eliminate it. Unfortunately, too many are
less dedicated to eliminating institutional racism than they are to
maintaining the status quo. Consider, for example, the rhetoric
during these Republican Presidential debates. Or, consider the
clumsily racist question Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia posed
when he asked whether black students should attend “lesser schools”
than schools like the University of Texas.
Student
activism was one of the highlights of 2015. Without waxing
nostalgic, though, I’d suggest that some of these young activists take
a page from the playbook written in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
when protests shut campuses down for weeks. Student protests led
to curriculum review on some campuses, the development of academic
departments like African American studies and Ethnic Studies, the
addition of faculty of color, a commitment to enroll more students of
color, and more. “Back in the day”, we were far less concerned
with “feeling” comfortable than with being empowered. We wanted
change, and we were willing to fight for it. And, the
change we wanted was tied to metrics. More scholarships,
more faculty, more student admits. Not necessarily more comfort.
From
my perspective discomfort is a good thing. Discomfort is a sign
that something is wrong. Clearly there is much that is wrong on
our campuses and in our nation. Racism is alive and well,
though it shows itself in different forms than it did decades
ago. The signs don’t say “white” or “colored”
anymore. Few “civilized” whites use the n— word, but
expletives are hardly necessary when there is a coded language of
exclusion.
Too
many of us prefer complacency to discomfort. We prefer to think
that everything is fine. Too many would like to pretend that inequality
and injustice are minor matters until a headline shakes us out of
complacency – a young man shot 16 times while he is on his back, a
young woman supposedly hanging herself in a jail cell. Then there
is protest, and anger, and rage. Still, too little done to
develop a sustainable attack on the racism that plagues our
nation. Student activists of 2015 could learn from the sixties
activists, and they can also teach “mainstream” leaders twenty-first
century organizing techniques. And across generations, there must
be teaching and learning about complacency and discomfort, about what
change looks like, and about what people are willing to give up to get
change.
This
2016 election year promises lots of conversation about justice and
change. Some political leaders will talk of “overregulation”,
while others will suggest that we must pass new laws. Some will
suggest that affirmative action is no longer necessary, while others
are clear that there remains unequal access to higher education.
When questions of law are debated, I find it useful to consider Dr.
King’s view of law – it won’t make you love me, but it will keep you
from lynching me and, as he said, “that’s pretty important”. Dr.
King described himself as a “drum major for justice”, not a drum major
for comfort. The campus activists who are raising critical
questions are motivated by justice and cannot allow themselves to be
sidelined with conversations about comfort. Comfort will always
be elusive in a racist society. And that’s a good thing.
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