February
1 begins Black History Month, a national annual observance
since 1926, honoring and celebrating the achievements of
African-Americans.
February
1, 2010, the International Civil Rights Center and Museum
(ICRCM) opened in Greensboro, North
Carolina, honoring the courageous
action of four African- American students. Their actions
led to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which mandated desegregation
of all public accommodations.
Fifty-two
years ago on February 1, 1960, the now ICRCM was a Woolworth’s
store and the site of the original sit-in where Ezell A.
Blair Jr. (also known as Jibreel Khazan), David Leinhail
Richmond, Joseph Alfred McNeil, and Franklin Eugene McCain
from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical College (NC
A&T), an historically black college, sat at its lunch
counter as a form of non-violent direct action, protesting
the store’s segregated seating policy. And as a result of
their civil disobedience, sit-ins sprung up not only in
Greensboro but throughout the South, challenging other forms
of this nation’s segregated public accommodations, including
bathrooms, water fountains, parks, theaters, and swimming
pools, to name a few.
If
Dr. Carter Woodson, the Father of Black History, were alive
today, he would be proud that the ICRCM opened.
However,
for a younger generation of African- Americans as well as
whites, whose ballots helped elect this country’s first
African-American president, celebrating Black History Month
seems outdated.
“Obama
is post-racial. And Black History Month is old school,”
Josh Dawson (26) of New Hampshire tells me.
For
many whites as well as people of color of Dawson’s
generation, Obama’s race was a “non-issue.” And Obama’s
election encapsulated for them both the physical and symbolic
representation of Martin Luther King’s vision uttered in
his historic “I Have a Dream” speech during the 1963 March
on Washington.
“King
said don’t judge by the color of our skin, but instead the
content of our character,” Dawson continues.
In
proving how “post-racial” Obama was as a presidential candidate,
Michael Crowley of The New Republic wrote in his article “Post-racial” that it wasn’t
only liberals who had no problem with Obama’s race but conservatives
had no problem too, even the infamous ex-Klansman David
Duke.
“Even
white Supremacists don’t hate Obama,” Crowley
writes about Duke. “[Duke] seems almost nonchalant about
Obama, don’t see much difference in Barack Obama than Hillary
Clinton - or, for that matter, John McCain.”
For
years, the celebration of Black History Month has always
brought up the ire around “identity politics” and “special
rights.”
“If
we’re gonna have Black History Month, why not White History
Month? Italian History Month? Chinese History Month?” Dawson
questions.
During
the George W. Bush years, we saw the waning interest in
“identity politics,” creating both political and systematic
disempowerment of marginalized groups, like people of color,
women, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ)
people. We
also saw the gradual dismantling of affirmative action policies,
like in 2003 when the Supreme Court split the difference
on affirmative action, allowing the Bakke case on reverse
discrimination to stand.
In
celebrating Black History Month in what is now perceived
by some to be the “post-racial” era since Obama took office,
I worry how we as a nation will honestly talk about race.
For
example, During Black History Month in 2009, Eric Holder
received scathing criticism for his speech on race. His
critics said the tone and tenor of the speech was confrontational
and accusatory.
“Though
this nation has proudly thought of itself as an ethnic melting
pot,” Holder said, “in things racial we have always been
and continue to be, in too many ways, essentially a nation
of cowards.”
Since
Obama has taken office Tea-party racism has flourished.
Some argue they are the new reformulation of both the Confederates
and KKK.
“I’ve
attended a number of Tea Party events and run into too many
who use words like “nigger” and “spic” and “fag” as part
of their normal conversation. And while Tea Party organizers
say they do not support or tolerate racism or bigotry, we
have yet to see a single waver of signs using racial slurs
escorted from a Tea Party event” said Doug Thompson
of Blue Ridge Muse.
And
the racial divide in this country isn’t only Tea Party versus
everybody else, it is also along party lines. In her recent
January 21st op-ed “Showtime at the Apollo,” New York Times columnist, Maureen Dowd wrote, “The man who became
famous with a speech declaring that we were one America,
not opposing teams of red and blue states, presides over
an America more riven by blue and red than ever.”
Within
the African-American LGBTQ community, Black History Month
has always come under criticism. And rightly so! The absence
of LGBTQ people of African descent in the month-long celebration
is evidence of how race, gender and sexual politics of the
dominant culture are reinscribed in black culture as well.
It leads you to believe that the only shakers and movers
in the history of people of African descent in the U.S.
were and still are heterosexuals. And because of this heterosexist
bias, the sheroes and heroes of LGBTQ people of African
decent - like Pat Parker, Audre Lorde, Essex Hemphill, Joseph
Beam, and Bayard Rustin - are mostly only known and lauded
within an LGBTQ subculture of black life.
However,
the argument that celebrating Black History Month is no
more than a celebration of a relic tethered to an old defunct
paradigm of the civil rights era and is a hindrance to black
people moving forward is bogus.
In
order to move forward you must look back.
And
in so doing, were it not for the successful sit-ins, marches,
and boycotts of the 1960’s, could we have this conversation
in 2012?
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion
columnist, theologian, and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of
the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific
School of Religion.
A native of Brooklyn,
Rev. Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College and Union
Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and served
as a pastor at an African-American church before coming
to Harvard Divinity School for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow.
She was recently named to MSNBC’s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author
of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible
Prayers for Not’So’Everyday Moments. As an African-American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society
that is frequently invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com.
Click here
to contact the Rev. Monroe.
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