Now, obviously, the only way to
translate
the written word to the cinema
involves doing
considerable violence to the
written word, to
the extent, indeed, of forgetting
the written word.
-James Baldwin, The Devil Finds Work
After
the death of Fred Hampton,
executed by the Chicago Police, betrayed by a Black informant,
many Blacks in my generation became activists. Black males of my age
group became fodder for the profiteers of that war in Vietnam. Local
law enforcement incarcerated others. We marched in Chicago despite
Old Man Daley, and we loaded school buses and headed for Springfield
to protest injustice. From atop lunchroom tables at our high schools,
we demanded and received “Afro-American” history classes.
And yes, we wore “afros” and read The Wretched
of the Earth and Soul
on Ice.
And
The Fire Next Time.
We have integration,
now. My people are dying
behind banners and posters that proclaim Black Lives Matter. It’s
worrisome.
Over a year ago, in this mid-sized
city in Wisconsin, front lawns displayed the blue colored Trump
signs; today, black colored posters and banners announce to passersby
that the Black Lives Matter Movement is honored by the homeowners.
“Black Lives Matter!”
Wow!
Thinking there might be new and
courageous Black residents, I discovered not Black Americans.
Instead, the homeowners displaying these Black Lives Matter posters
and signs are white. White women. And the one’s I met were
lesbians.
I’m not a lesbian and
shouldn’t be considered less than because I’m not. I
oppose to any and all forms of oppression. I oppose any and all forms
of injustice by any group against another. The right to have rights
by the oppressed must be honored by all.
And that’s what concerns me.
Whose rights are being ignored? Again?
I’m sure someone will point to
one Black woman, a handful of Black women. Maybe a Black lesbian or
two as well.
But I’m talking about a
localized practice of exclusion on par with the systemic ideology and
institutionalized practice of white supremacy. This is old: This
group is oppressed and this other is too. But the long oppressed and
long despised Black American should just step aside? Bow out? Take a
back seat; stand behind the speaker at the podium; wait your turn
again at the back of the line?
Long oppressed and long despised
people haven’t been oppressed or despised by white men only.
That’s not how white supremacy works. And it works well, I see.
I suppose I wasn’t surprised
to find, in addition to race, church affiliation institutionalizes a
profession of faith—and that matters, too. Faith in what? What
am I asked to have faith in?
I have faith in humanity. But
mythical narratives in which I required to relinquish my right to be
human and contribute to solving the problems of racial injustice
don’t interest me. And why should these fantastical narratives
matter to me? What matters is ending suffering and bringing about
justice. In other words, ending white supremacy matters!
Bullshitting, that is, engaging in
tactics to derail true resistance, matters to those determined to
maintain white supremacy.
So
whose lives matter, really? Because social justice education with
Blacks as central organizers and educators does not matter, it seems.
Black lives matter only when the anger of Blacks is drowned
out by faith in white supremacy, patriarchy, and capitalism.
Integration
matters, alright! Yes, this is old, classic: it all looks good on
paper and in mission statements. But it’s nothing if not a
police state! The women, in this case, used to “protect and
preserve” - from where I stand—the authority of the
State.
A dazzling number of police
acquittals today speaks to the reality of white America’s
relationship to its narratives of innocence.
In
2016, too, when so many liberals were denouncing their approval of
Trump, I was asked by a dear friend, who died a few months after this
phone call, if I had seen I’m Not Your Negro.
Filmmaker Raouk
Peck’s documentary envisions the book James Baldwin began but
“never finished.” Haitian-born Peck explores the history
of racism in the US.
On
the phone, I hesitate because I’m not being asked if I’ve
seen La La Land. It’s
Baldwin. James. Uncle James.
No,
I say.
Will
I see it?
Yes,
but not now.
Oh,
you should see it!
You! (Me)!
Not
to critique it, professionally. That’s not what I’m being
asked.
I’m
familiar with Baldwin. I’ve studied him and taught his essays
for years, I say.
There’s
not enough time in a lifetime to say more. I would like to say that
I’m one who came to Baldwin when I was young, just as Peck did,
just as so many young girls and boys in Peck’s and my
generation. Like so many Black young
girls and boys.
But
even more than time… I know Baldwin because he knew me. Like
Malcolm. But it’s a documentary not just about James Baldwin…
That’s why we are all with him… That’s why Tamir
is there. Trayvon. So many dead and still alive and yet to come…
But
I say only: I know James Baldwin!
You
should go and see the film. Why don’t you want to see the film?
And
it’s as if I’m out of time. It’s not my history
there on that screen. It’s not a history I carry with me. If it
can be said what the documentary shows is NOT my history, has nothing
whatsoever to do with me, then maybe it can be said the film is
flawed. Worse, there’s no truth in it! It’s a lie because
I’m somehow outside of time.
Have
you seen Get Out? I
ask. I went to see Get Out.
Ten
minutes into the film, I’m smiling at filmmaker Jordan Peele
because I can see as I watch his work, he’s not afraid! But I
dare not say this.
What
is that? he asks.
And
I try to explain Get Out,
I realize I can’t. How do you explain a plot that is your
reality, always denied?
He
asks, If he should see the film? Are you saying I should
see the film?
Nothing short of surgically
removing our conscientiousness or our very humanity in this current
atmosphere of white supremacy makes offering love to Black folks an
enterprise of possibilities.
I
let the matter drop.
And
not long ago, just a month ago, in fact, another dear friend, a
30-something, white female, asked if I’ve seen I’m
Not Your Negro.
Oh, no!
Have
you seen Get Out? I
ask without answering her question.
No,
not yet. But you
should see I’m Not Your Negro!
You should…
I should! I should!
It’s
nightmarish if it seems like you’re the only one awake! He was
struggling to understand, and she, young still, is willing to
understand. This is more than can be said about white America as a
whole.
Innocence! Innocence! American
innocence!
It’s
a continuum. A horror that keeps on horrifying—particularly
when I’m asked to wonder out loud about the handsome
Trevor Noah or oh, that so
articulate Neil Degrasse Tyson!
Ten
years in the making and finally filmmaker Raouk Peck has I’m
Not Your Negro in the cinema
houses. In several
interviews the reader can view online, Peck explains his approach to
film making and his attitude about compromise. He’s not about
making profits in order to live the “American Dream” or
the “Good Life”; he’s not about to compromise the
integrity of his work to appease the ideological goals of
profiteering executives in Hollywood.
Yet,
in one interview, Peck’s asked to comment on the come and go,
the “trend” of Black film making. It has it’s
moments, you know, says the interviewer at this “Race and
History: A Conversation with Raouk Peck,” Doc
Conference, TIFF, 2016. There
were two or three in the 1980s. And then only a few in the 1990s!
What about those “trends”--those “moments” in
the lives of Black films and Black filmmakers, Dude?
And,
undaunted by the innocence of the nonchalant interviewer, Peck looks
directly at the one who believes he knows…
I’ll
approach the question in my own way, Peck begins: “I don’t
believe in such moments!”
Listen
carefully, it’s not about “trends.” The coming and
goings of Black filmmakers who do and then just don’t—he’s
one of the few Black filmmakers to still be surviving because he has
some economic opportunities not afforded others who should have been
encouraged and supported similar to white filmmakers. He was able to
work outside of the film business and direct his financial resources
into his projects.
It’s
not a matter of “trends.” It’s that Black lives
don’t matter in America—really. And we know that…
I know that.
Peck
names Black men and women, filmmakers, still struggling to find the
money to do their work. Yes, some have given up.
Who
decries the lose of these lives and their voices?
It’s
not better now as opposed to some mythical past when it was worse,
Peck explains. But we’ll never get the funding or support we
need from the industry “unless
we take it.”
A
silent interviewer is now listening to what I’m sure, he didn’t
expect to hear. Some in the audience are encouraging Peck as he
further explains how
change could represent
real change! It’s
a change he’d like to see. Peck can imagine it:
He’s
in an executive’s office. He’s allotted the usual 30
minutes to pitch a film idea. And finally, he “doesn’t
need to spend 25 minutes of that half hour” explaining “who
James Baldwin is and why he’s important!”
“We
should be able to enter a room with someone who knows where we are
coming from, who knows our history.” Then we can discuss film
making, about the process of making a film. “We can talk film
and not have to convince [someone] that [we] exist.”
And
we do!
There’s
a legacy of resistance too. And it’s always present.
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