The President
of the United States hit a new low when he used the military to clear
DC’s Lafayette Park of citizens. They were exercising their
First Amendment rights of speech and assembly while the president was
exhibiting a chest-thumping use of force. He brandished a Bible,
something which he seems not to have read. That was his low, and he
got even worse in his offensive rhetoric, especially about the murder
of George Floyd and the protests of police brutality.
He stooped
even lower and illustrated his infamous racial insensitivity when his
campaign announced that he would have his first rally since the
coronavirus shut down the nation in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Juneteenth.
June 19, 1865, was the day when enslaved people in Texas, the last
enslaved Black people in the nation, learned that they were free. The
Emancipation Proclamation was on January 1, 1863, but Black folk
didn’t learn of their freedom until two years later.
Choosing to
have his first campaign rally in Tulsa on Juneteenth is a slap in the
face to Black Americans. Juneteenth is a celebratory day, but there
is nothing to celebrate when our bigoted President co-opts our
holiday for a cheap political stunt. The Divider-in-Chief will
supposedly deliver a message of “racial conciliation” in
Tulsa, a site known for white hate and economic envy that left
hundreds dead and thousands homeless. I’m not sure he can
deliver such a message, especially when he recently said that issues
of prejudice and bigotry could be solved “quickly and easily.”
The Tulsa
Massacre of 1921 took place when armed white people swarmed
Greenwood, an affluent Black area of Tulsa. They looted houses, then
burned them, dripping with economic envy. A gubernatorial commission
concluded that the cause of the Massacre was “too many n--s”
having too much money.”
Money wasn’t
the only thing the Black people of Tulsa had. They also had an
unwavering sense of self-determination and pride. When segregation
excluded Black residents from libraries, wealthy Tulsans built their
own. Black people had pharmacies, hospitals, grocery and department
stores, theatres, churches (one was torched in the Massacre), and
schools. You could find the same professionals in Greenwood as you
could in “white” Tulsa – physicians, attorneys,
teachers, entrepreneurs, and more. This thriving Black community was
threatening to whites, who were heavily invested in the myth of white
superiority. While Greenwood thrived, envious white folks plotted
and, according to Dr. Olivia Hooker, a Tulsa survivor who died in
2018, stockpiled guns, waiting for an excuse to attack.
When
19-year-old Dick Rowland jostled 17-year-old Sarah Page in an
elevator, whites were ready. They threatened to lynch Rowland, and
then when armed Black men said they would prevent a lynching, it was
on. Whites swarmed Greenwood, burning, killing, destroying a symbol
of Black pride and entrepreneurial capacity. The people who lost
their property were never made whole. Those who had insurance found
their claims denied. The white mob responsible for the destruction
went mostly unpunished, reinforcing the notion that you could
terrorize Black people, destroy their property, and suffer no
consequences.
We have a
president who insults Black people and experiences no consequences, a
president so unabashedly racist in his words, now piles on with his
Juneteenth and antics. His press secretary said Juneteenth is a “very
meaningful day for him.” Really? The same president who
thought, just three years ago, that Frederick Douglass was still
alive, has now developed some knowledge and empathy for Black
history, empathetic to instances of systemic racism?
While I am
repulsed by the president’s decision to go to Tulsa on
Juneteenth, there is a silver lining to his cluelessness. The day
after his announcement, there was massive news coverage about Trump’s
disgusting decision, and accompanying robust commentary. White
Americans don’t know much about Black history, but neither do
many Black folks. If you didn’t know about Juneteenth and the
Tulsa Massacre before, you surely know about it now. The president’s
ill-advised decision has increased awareness about a chapter in Black
history that too many want to deny. The destruction of Greenwood, a
thriving Black community, because of jealousy and malice is one of
the many reasons the demand for reparations is a solid one.
45 walks
around with his foot in his mouth; his actions and comments after the
George Floyd murder protests are clear examples. But the celebration
of Juneteenth and the horrors of the Tulsa Massacre are not taught in
standard history books and not well known outside the Black
community. Thanks to Trump, these incidents are better known. Every
slap has a silver lining.
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