Oh Boy, here we go. Here are 2 emails I received today from these very cool but still white people I know from the island plus my response. I know no matter what they say they are going to be offended. If I didn't reply they would also be offended. BLEH.
Wondering how some of you handle these types of situations.
I recieved the one above yesterday and tried to ignore it and then lo and behold this one arrives today from the brother:
so i sent them this reply. I know this is not going to turn out well.
Wondering how some of you handle these types of situations.
email said:Loved the wallet expo. Couldn't believe I missed that M. Moore treasure. Shared it with T's brother who graduated from Cornell and still lives up in Ithaca which he descirbes as 10 miles surrounded by reality. But reality has finally hit hard. He's realizing he's surrounded by morons even though its a "university" town who despite their posturing are rascists to the core. I'm cc'ing him. He probably like to hear your insights.
This has hurt him deeply. He has two young sons who he has committed to a public education system but is encountering closed minds everywhere.
I recieved the one above yesterday and tried to ignore it and then lo and behold this one arrives today from the brother:
2nd email from brother said:I'm certainly frustrated and angry by what's happened here recently regarding the racial harrassment of a middle-schooler on the bus, the school board's misguided attempt to foil the resulting lawsuit (by arguing that human rights laws don't apply to students!), and the racial tension and protests at the high school. But I never really got to tell you the other half of the story.
I'm not surrounded by morons (I don't believe those were my words). There are a lot of people in Ithaca and the surrounding areas, as there are everywhere, who are racist or, at the very least, are uncomfortable talking about issues of race, class, and privilege. (I believe it's easier for people to talk about their sex lives than their beliefs about race and class.) Ithaca often gets branded, quite rightly, as a liberal town (we did have a socialist mayor for six years, after all), and the point I was trying to make was that it's upsetting when people who support so many other progressive causes are so backwards when it comes to race and class. In other communities that don't bear the liberal label, or that are racially or economically homogenous, the expectation is probably not so high and the hypocrisy is not as glaring.
The real difference in Ithaca, I believe, is that we're having these difficult conversations in public, precisely because there are so many open-minded people who demand them. That was never more evident than the night the school board dropped its appeal. The public comment section of the board meeting ran three hours, and it had to be held in the high school auditorium because the turnout was so high. There are closed minds in Ithaca, but there is also a critical mass of people who are working hard to bring about real change in the system.
The group I belong to, the Village at Ithaca www.VillageAtIthaca.org , is one group effectively advocating for change, both at a systemic level and at a family level. The community has been instrumental in getting the school district to adopt equity as one of its goals - a pretty daunting task.
So although I am certainly disgusted by what happened here, I'm also inspired by the large community of activists from diverse backgrounds who are committed to improving educational outcomes for all students. These are the people I'm surrounded by - passionate, intelligent, progressive people who I hope will be role models for Sam and Malcolm.
That's the other half of the story that I didn't get to you tell you on the phone. I'm not feeling isolated and disillusioned at all. This is very draining work, but also immensely rewarding.
so i sent them this reply. I know this is not going to turn out well.
bigirl's reply said:Greetings. No disrespect intended, but do not forget
we are in Amerikkka. Not a damn thing has changed.
Everything is just masked, veiled and hidden now.
I spent alot of time around white hippies. Some of the
most racist people I ever met and they really are the
worst because they think they are not. The same
applies to these "liberal" college town
"intellectuals".
The education system in Amerikkka teaches a white
supremacist curriculum and this includes college. Then
look at the (not so) subtle images portrayed in the
media.
"Politically Correct" terms do not exist for our
benefit but to coddle white guilt. The bottom line is
that in this particular country, nothing can move
foward until whites are ready to REALLY have the
reparations discussion. Until they stop teaching in
schools that the first Africans came here on the slave
ships and that Columbus "discovered" Amerikkka. Until
Black history month is done away with and its a
regular part of curriculum as it should be. Until they
do away with bullshit hyphenated terms. You should see
how white people react when I call them
"European-Americans". Just some things to think about.
Again, no disrespect or offense intended. I could
write volumes on this subject.
As for the schoolbus incident, I wonder how it would
have been handled if the kid was a Jew?
BTW some of the dumbest and most rhetorical people I
have ever met have been these so called "scholars"
<rolls eyes>
suggested reading(if you haven't already):
"They Came Before Columbus" and anything else by Dr.
Ivan Van Sertima
"The Isis Papers" by Dr. Frances Cress Welsing
"Stolen Legacy" by George GM James
Peace and Blessings.
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