The Jenesse Center is the oldest and most respected
domestic violence organization for black women in the city
of Los Angeles. Its battered women shelters and family protection
programming are services of great renown and offer women and
children the opportunity to get new starts in their unstable
lives. Not many groups do “God’s work” in the way they do,
so it’s important to hold them up in high esteem and defend
them against any assaults of esteem of their clients and supporters.
Why? Because domestic violence often begins with verbal assaults
on a woman’s self-esteem, but evolves into continual psychological
and physical attacks on her person that does lifelong damage.
So when the Jenesse Center holds its annual
fundraiser, it’s “Silver Rose” luncheon, the community turns
out en masse. Oscar winning Actress, Halle Berry, has adopted
the agency and become its spokesperson, as an extraordinary
example of a woman being able to shine in the aftermath of
domestic violence, overcoming her own history of abusive relationships.
The Silver Rose luncheon takes on an air of celebrity as women
(and men) from all walks of life come together to recognize
those in the community who do good works and to raise money
to sustain the program.
This
year, Halle leveraged her Hollywood contacts to the hilt and
brought in late night TV host and comedian, Jay Leno, to conduct
a live auction. Leno is respected for his charity work and
the community appreciated him being there. And, as with all
comedians, you never know what you’re gonna get in terms of
what they think is funny. Comedian/borderline “crazy” funny-woman,
Wanda Sykes was Mistress of Ceremonies, so you kind of expected
the unexpected, given Sykes’ brand of humor. However, she
was quite tame (relatively speaking) - maybe in deference
to the occasion, or the cause. It was Leno who stole the moment
- and not for the best thing he could have been known for.
Leno was in rare form, making fun of Michael Jackson, and
other things black people tend to laugh at. But when the live
auction began in the passion of trying to get more money from
a wealthy, well connected female bidder, Leno asked a male
bidder, “You’re not going to let that bitch out bid you, are
you?”
It
was a moment that both he and the audience knew was totally
inappropriate. If you’ve never seen 500 women’s face freeze
at one moment, it really not a good thing. It’s kinda of a
glazed “deer in headlights look” where you can see them thinking…and
asking themselves “did he just say what I thought he said”
or “did he just call that woman a …?” That look is usually
following with some act of aggression, as the “B”-word, even
more then the “N”-word, tends to evoke a mad and violent reaction
out of most black woman. Jay recognized his mistake immediately
(turning beet red in the process) and tried to play it off
(a joke about how he watched “Cheaters” so he knows how black
woman “kick ass”) but he was luckier that 500 bidding paddles
weren’t thrown at his a** as that’s the type of knee-jerk
reaction that word provokes. There is never an “appropriate”
time to call a woman a bitch, not even in jest, but to use
the word at a domestic violence fundraiser, where the audience
is highly sensitized to acts of verbal and psychological abuse,
was even more outrageous.
Women who have been abused know the word as
a cue that the assault is about to begin, first on her self-esteem,
just before the fists start flying and her physical person
is assaulted. It was tough to sit there and digest this. The
only reason I’m not going ballistic on Jay Leno is because
he was there doing some good and he wasn’t trying to be (I
don’t believe) vicious in the way Michael Richards was or
benignly ignorant in the way Don Imus claimed to be. Jay Leno
hangs out with black people on a regular basis so he understands
racial (and religious) sensibilities.
In the context of comedy, we understand that
comedy, like tragedy, has no limits. But as he found out a
couple weeks ago, all Blacks aren’t like Kevin Eubanks - we
don’t laugh at everything. So, here is where we begin the
re-education of Jay Leno about black people, in general, and
black women, in particular. With Mother’s Day on the way,
we all have a need to reinforce the love that we have for
our mothers, sisters and daughters. What better time to discuss
respect for women, in the context of law number one – never
disrespect – than on Mother’s Day. Not even jokingly.
Calling
any woman, particularly an abused woman (of any race) a bitch
is as cruel as eating in front of a starving person, hitting
a person in handcuffs, giving shoes to a person with no feet
or sending a calendar to an innocent man sentenced to life.
You have to be really unconscious to let your mind slip like
that. Or really ignorant. It’s hard to paint Jay Leno
as ignorant because of the point made earlier, so that leaves
him as being unconsciously careless. I’m sure he wouldn’t
be as careless if it were a woman close to him. If another
comedian had done the same thing to a woman in Jay’s life
how would Jay have felt? Let’s just say that if he had called
my mother a bitch, there would have been some f*ckin’ fighting
up there. In fact, based on some of the women that I knew
were in the audience - had he picked the wrong one, there
would have been some f*ckin fighting up there.
So, he was really kinda lucky that time and
space worked in his favor on this particular occasion. Jay
Leno must always be conscious of whom he’s talking to, and
cautious as to what he talks about, if he’s going to help
disenfranchised people. Jay
Leno must re-educate himself if he’s going to play the role
of Good Samaritan. He must do it in total sincerity. Then
his good works would be perceived as real. His careless mistake
(and some women don’t think it was a mistake because it came
out of his mouth too) at the Jenesse fundraiser gives the
impression he was there just doing a friend a favor.
Jay Leno raised more than $30,000 (the final
count is not in) for the Jenesse Center and this commentary
is not intended to take away from the good he actually did.
It is to point out that the bad shouldn’t outweigh the good,
and calling a woman a bitch, in front of 800 people, negates
the good Leno was there to do. I mean, is the charity supposed
to be glad he showed up, take the money AND ignore the insult?
I don’t think so. Jay Leno should publicly
apologize to Jenesse Executive Director, Karl Earl, Halle
Berry, the Board and supporters of the Jenesse Center, in
a newspaper and in their program at next year’s fundraiser.
I suppose asking a comedian to take the word, bitch, out of
their vocabulary, might be a little much (though it would
be wise to do it), but might want to save that for your white
audiences. White women tend to play with that word a little
differently then black women. In conclusion, not even Jay
Leno can be so unmindful of his surroundings that he consciously
offends the masses. It’s like slapping a woman and maintaining
that you still love her. That’s the way batterers and abusers
show “their love.” In the end, the woman discovers it’s not
really love at all. Just another level of abuse, whether the
abuser is a drug dealer or a comedian.
So for all the people that were offended by
Jay’s slip (or slap), we extend to my mother, my wife, my
sisters, my daughters, and all mother’s everywhere…
A Happy Mother’s Day.
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist,
Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, is a national columnist, managing
director of the Urban Issues Forum
and author of the new book, Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom.
His Website is AnthonySamad.com.
Click
here to contact Dr. Samad.