“I am convinced that America offers something real for black people. It
is not though, the romantic love of integration — though, like romance,
we may seek and sometimes experience it.” – Derrick Bell, Silent
Covenants (2004)
My wife and I recently attended an open house in Newark, New Jersey
hosted by Keller Williams, a realty company in a suburb of Newark. During
the open house, the realtor boasted that the home was situated on an “excellent,
safe and quiet block.”
After a long discussion and some reflection, we called the realtor
later that evening, explaining that we were prepared to make an offer
on the home and asking to meet him at the property to discuss the sale. After
a very long pause, the realtor reminded me that it was well after dark – it
was almost 7:00 p.m., after all – and that because he was without the
protection of his “bodyguard,” he refused to come to Newark. Instead,
the realtor suggested that we meet him at a nearby McDonald’s. I replied
that we were not, in fact, attempting to purchase a McDonald’s franchise,
and that his refusal to meet us in Newark was deeply problematic, particularly
because he deliberately misrepresented as “excellent” a neighborhood
that he was unwilling to drive into after dark.
The realtor forcefully reiterated his refusal to meet us in Newark,
and said that we could either meet him at McDonald's or at his office
in suburban Bergen County.
Unfortunately, the realtor’s behavior is not just an isolated act,
but is reflective of the type of behavior that many whites have effectively
and consistently utilized to undermine attempts to end racial segregation
in this country.
Fifty years after the Supreme Court’s historic decision in Brown
v. Board of Education, a case that overturned the “separate but
equal” doctrine, and one that is often cited as the milestone in
America’s march towards racial equality, America’s neighborhoods – and,
by extension, its schools – are nearly as segregated as they were
in 1954.
The unspoken subtext of Brown
Commenting on the Supreme Court’s decision to require desegregation “with
all deliberate speed,” Robert L. Carter, former NAACP General Counsel
and one of the lawyers who argued Brown, asserted that it was “clear
that what the [“all deliberate speed”] formula required was movement
toward compliance on terms that the white South would accept.” Carter
explained that the Supreme Court failed to fully appreciate the enormity
of the segregation problem, and in showing compassion to the white
South by regulating desegregation at a pace palatable to them, the
Court both failed to develop a willingness to comply with, and, in
fact, encouraged white defiance of the order to integrate.
And defy integration is precisely what many whites did. To resist
the Supreme Court’s desegregation order in Brown, whites closed
public primary and secondary schools, and, in some cases, literally
blocked entrances to schools that remained open for Blacks.
Not surprisingly, integration moved, to the extent it moved at all,
at a glacier-like pace in the years following Brown. Indeed,
by 1963, the 11 states of the old Confederacy had less than 2 percent
of their Black students attending school with white students.
Today, residential and educational segregation rates equal those of
the Jim Crow era to within two-tenths of a percent in some neighborhoods,
resulting in what Professor Derrick Bell calls “social and economic
apartheid.”
If Albert Einstein was correct, and “insanity” is defined as conducting
the same experiment repeatedly and somehow expecting it to yield a
different result, then America may be insane as to its approach to
addressing racial segregation.
To stop the insanity, Professor Derrick Bell, a civil rights lawyer
who once believed that the Brown decision was the equivalent
of the “Holy Grail of racial justice,” argues that we must not only
rethink, but must ultimately abandon, our approach to social equality
through integration.
The suggestion that we abandon our integration efforts is deeply offensive
to some, and in fact, unthinkable for others. But fifty years after
the Supreme Court overruled Plessy’s “separate but equal doctrine,” integration
has been unattainable. Even more disheartening has been the unsuccessful
endeavor to compel white folks to share their neighborhoods and classrooms.
Professor Bell notes that, despite the onerous burdens of segregation,
many Black schools and neighborhoods functioned well during segregation. Indeed,
many in the Black community who were at the center of the battle for
equal rights would have supported less than full integration.
Reflecting on his childhood in segregated Richmond, Virginia in the
1950s, Randall Robinson in Defending the Spirit explained that
on his block “segregation compelled what would otherwise have been
a very unlikely black unity.”
Around the corner from the Robinsons lived the Petersons, “one of
Richmond’s most prominent black families.” Mr. Peterson was a high
school principal and his wife was a primary school teacher. Directly
across the street from the Robinsons lived Margaret and Grace, who
worked at home, as prostitutes. Next to Grace and Margaret lived Mr.
Owens, owner of “the Esso service station,” who put his “Christmas
tree up on his front porch in November and took it down in March.” From
Mr. Owens’ porch,” Robinson continues, “you could smell the industrial
strength fumes emanating from the nearby open windows of one of our
community’s most viable businesses, Shirley’s Beauty Parlor.”
Separated from white Richmond, Robinson remembers that “we made a
world of our own with black service providers – teachers, doctors,
lawyers, preachers, hoteliers. Adjusted for segregation’s psychic
cost and our persistent poverty, our community was quite viable and
my childhood essentially happy.”
Given what is now known about the permanent nature of racism in this
country, and using the last fifty years of unsuccessful integration
attempts as our guide, perhaps what is now needed, and what Bell argues
the Supreme Court in Brown should have done, is to enforce the “equal” component
of the “separate but equal” standard.
Bell urges that it is time to accept the obvious, as did Booker T.
Washington in 1895.
Booker T. Washington was praised by whites and despised by Blacks
for his accommodationist philosophy on race, reflected in his 1895 “Atlanta
Compromise” speech, which encouraged Blacks to concede segregation
and to surrender basic citizenship rights in hopes that hostile whites
would respond with better schooling and employment for Blacks. Although
Washington’s speech no doubt deserved the condemnation it received
from the Black leaders of his day, he nevertheless articulated a story
that has significance for Blacks today.
Washington told the story of a ship that was lost at sea for many
days before finally seeing a rescue boat. The lost ship’s hysterical
crew signaled their desperate need for water, as they were dying of
thirst. In its response, the rescue boat told the lost ship several
times to “cast your buckets where you are.” The crew complied and
brought up buckets filled with fresh water from the Amazon River into
which they had inadvertently sailed.
About this parable, Bell notes that “whatever the wisdom of Washington’s
advice to a people whose dire physical plight was the result, not of
storms abroad, but of overwhelming racial hostility at home, the admonition ‘cast
your buckets where you are’ can be a solution if not the salvation
for those working to reform and revitalize the debilitating effects
of racism.”
To benefit from the resources among us, Bell urges that Blacks must,
among other things, supplement the continuing struggle for racial equality
with creative forms of personal and collective self-image, group organization,
collection and distribution of our shared resources, and strategic
planning.
As crazy as it sounds, maybe accepting the separate nature of our
status in this country, and working towards the “equal” component of
the “separate but equal” calculus, is where we should be headed. Blacks
have attempted to meet white folks at the McDonald’s of their choosing
for long enough.
Ryan Paul Haygood is an attorney.