Monday, July 18, 2022

I got shot


I know it's still early but today, I got shot. Yesterday, I got shot. My history and experience tells me that tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow I'll get shot. I stopped, I got shot. I reached for requested documentation, I got shot. I had my cell phone in my hand, I got shot. I had a legal weapon and said so, I got shot. I ran in fear, I got shot. I was 12 years old playing alone in a park, I got shot. I was driving an old car that backfired, I got shot. I was asleep in my bed, I got shot. I was relaxing, alone in my home, I got shot. A neighbor was concerned about me, called for help, I got shot. I committed a non-violent low level felony with no indication of a weapon, I didn't get shot. I got suffocated. I carried a sign saying stop shooting me. I got shot.

White men kill police officers or parade participants or church goers or protesters and get their day in court and maybe even lunch, or a glass of water and a thank you, for good measure. I get handcuffed while dying in the street. The rivers are becoming salty from my tears. But it's okay, because it's my fault. I got shot.

 

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Fathers and Freedom

If you attend June 19th services at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral in Cleveland, OH you might have heard this message. To you I say, But wait there's more! Please continue reading to get more of my thoughts on Juneteenth and Fathers' Day.

Matthew 7:9-10

9 “Which of you, if your son asks for bread, will give him a stone? 10 Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a snake?

In 2021, I suppose as an acknowledgement of the reality of slavery and its long-term effects on American Descendants of Slaves (ADOS), the U.S. Congress in a very rare show of solidarity, enacted a law making Juneteenth a Federal holiday.

A little background here. Schools in this country typically teach that Abraham Lincoln, The Great Emancipator, “freed the slaves” with Proclamation 95 (the Emancipation Proclamation) on January 1, 1863. Proclamation 95 however only freed slaves in states that were currently part of the Confederate States of America (CSA) and in rebellion against the government of the USA. Proclamation 95 was a political and military tactic whose goal was to destabilize the Confederacy by encouraging slave populations to flee to northern and western non slave holding states.

On June 19, 1865, in Galveston, TX, Union Army General Gordon Granger issued General Order No. 3 which was a statement about the Union Army's military rule of the defeated Confederacy and said among other things that “The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free.” Black dockworkers quickly spread the news to the black population of Galveston touching off a week's worth of prayer and celebration.

General Order No. 3, like it's more well known predecessor Proclamation 95, was one of 20 “Emancipation Proclamations” issued in the United States from 1780 to 1865 that attempted to put a band-aid on the gaping wound of slavery. In fact many of these proclamations were concerned less with how to actually deal with the issue of freed slaves and more with enumerating exactly how slave owners were to be compensated for their loss of a significant financial resource.

In 2022 Juneteenth falls on the day we also celebrate Fathers and Fatherhood. Does anyone appreciate the irony of celebrating freedom and fatherhood on the same day, when for so long black men have been circumscribed by the dominant society from truly celebrating either.

Prior to the end of the Civil War black families lived in constant fear that they would be separated from each other by a system that refused to acknowledge their human need to create and care for families. Fathers and mothers were sold away from each other and from their children, many never to be heard from again. After the Civil War it was common to see ads in newspapers and publications from formerly enslaved people trying to find family members.

Libra Hilde, in her 2020 book, Slavery, Fatherhood, and Paternal Duty in African American Communities over the Long Nineteenth Century, maintained that despite the challenges of living under a system of cruelty and complete disregard for their humanity, Black and enslaved men were loving, involved, and emotionally invested in their children, despite the barriers erected by white society. She demonstrates that Black fathers consistently provided for their children during and after slavery. Enslaved men regularly supported their families and communities in covert ways, as “their influence over their children was often subtle, indirect, and hidden from ‘dominant society’,” subverting and resisting the expectations of white society on a daily basis “within the intimate spaces of the father/child relationship” Hilde contends that caretaking was a form of resistance for enslaved men, as they attempted to covertly reappropriate the paternal role back from their enslavers.

There were instances where enslaved men, if they had a marketable skill, could make extra money if their master allowed them to sell their services. (The original side hustle). They might then be allowed to purchase their freedom. If successful, they would often then face a cruel choice. In many slave holding states the status of an unborn child was determined by the status of the mother. Thus a free black woman's child would be born free and an enslaved black woman's child would be born a slave. Black men who found a way out of enslavement, through either escape or earning extra money, very often had to decide whether to take the opportunity to gain their own freedom and hope they could come for their family later or ensure freedom for their wife and/or children while they themselves remained under the lash.

As a member of the Episcopal Church (ECUSA) I have to give a shout out here to Absalom Jones. At the age of 16 Absalom was sold away from his mother and several siblings. In 1770 he was allowed to marry an enslaved woman named Mary. By 1778 Absalom had earned and saved enough money to purchase his freedom. With the memory of his lost family in mind he bought his wife's freedom instead. In this way, he insured his children would be born free, and not as slaves. He was not freed himself until six years later in 1784.

Many people are under the mistaken impression that the attack on black men as fathers ended when slavery ended. Oh that I could say that was so!

For a brief period of history which we call Reconstruction it seemed as if the country might be able to begin healing from the long bleak period of human cruelty and the attendant pain. Then came the end of reconstruction and the beginning of almost another century of enshrining the secondary status of black people in both law and custom.

Black men were portrayed in news and entertainment media as “bad” fathers, neglectful and uninterested in their children, leaving black women to be seen as “superwomen” raising children without the support of black fathers. (That's a looong discussion for another day).

Just as during enslavement the role of black men as fathers was constricted and restricted by the dominant society. During the period we call Jim Crow black men were targeted for both judicial and extrajudicial execution. If a black man tried to stand up as a protector for his family against white aggression, he ran the risk of being killed. Many black men in the south were forced to choose leaving their families to find economic opportunities in the north or west, thereby separating them from their partners and children. Those who chose to stay were forced to suffer cruelty and economic deprivation and restraints on their ability to care for their families.

After the Great Depression and World War II the U.S. began looking at ways to help returning veterans and build the middle class. Here again black fathers were discouraged or even legally banned from taking advantage of programs designed to uplift families.

Then came the creation of social welfare programs in the 1960s and 1970s. “Welfare” was originally called Aid to Families with Dependent Children or AFDC. It was a program to give families a hand when things got rough. Keeping them and their children out of poverty. There was no requirement that recipients had to be families with single parents (usually women) as heads of households. As with many such programs when black people began to use these programs as a means to try and improve their lives, changes were implemented which brought direct harm to the institution of the black family. Suddenly families with mothers and fathers present were not eligible for assistance. Black fathers were very often targeted for enforcement, with families under constant scrutiny to make sure they were not “scamming the system”. If fathers were present in the home and the family was receiving welfare assistance the father or mother could be arrested and sent to jail. Thus black fathers were once again faced with the choice of leaving their families to help make sure they were fed or working covertly to circumvent a system which was being constantly redesigned and adapted to criminalize them as they exercised their role as fathers.

In 1965 Daniel Moynihan co-authored what became known as the Moynihan Report. In this treatise Moynihan maintained that there was a crisis in the black community because of instability of black families. Nowhere did he consider the ways in which the then current welfare system penalized black fathers who didn't “abandon” their families. Imagine being a black child bombarded with the message that your father, indeed your entire family, was bad. If your family needed public assistance and your father was around he was a criminal and you had to be always on the lookout for the social worker who might come and take him away. If he wasn't around he was a "deadbeat dad", a lowlife, who abandoned his responsibilities. Despite these assaults black fathers continued to endure. In many ways falling back on lessons learned from slave ancestors. I refer you again to Libra Hilde. Just as had been the case during the long period of enslavement “Black men were loving, involved, and emotionally invested in their children, despite the barriers erected by white society. ….Black fathers consistently provided for their children …. and regularly supported their families and communities in covert ways, as “their influence over their children was often subtle, indirect, and hidden from ‘dominant society’,” subverting and resisting the expectations of white society on a daily basis “within the intimate spaces of the father/child relationship”

Then came the “War on Drugs” further increasing the criminalization of black men and the assault on their role as fathers. In 1970 black people represented 11.1% of the general population in the U.S. But 46.4% of the prison population in December 1973. From 1973 to 1979, the black rate of incarceration rose by 47.9 percent, compared to a rise of only 40.6 percent among whites. So now there was a significant percentage of black fathers once again forced away from their families. A two-year study by the National Research Council concluded that the increase in incarceration rates was historically unprecedented, that the U.S. far outpaced the incarceration rates elsewhere in the world, and that high incarceration rates disproportionately affected Hispanic and black communities.

With further infringement on individual liberty, such as the 1994 crime bill, came more assaults on black men's ability to function as fathers. If you were convicted of a felony your ability to work and support yourself as well as your family became even more severely limited. Felons could not vote in most states. If you were a felon you could not apply for most types of federal and/or state assistance, including housing, food and education. Perhaps one of the most egregious infringements of rights, which harkens back to the early days of the “welfare reform” movement, when the mere presence of black fathers became a crime, was the prohibition of felons in public housing. Those living in public housing were not allowed to have convicted felons living with or even visiting with them. If you were a black man released from prison as a convicted felon and your family lived in public housing you were prohibited by law from living with them. If you attempted to do so you risked further incarceration and your family risked eviction. Once again black men had to draw upon their ingenuity and the wisdom of the ancestors to function as fathers in a society still hostile to them.

Many times men and their current or former partners had private arrangements among themselves to manage their family situation and finances. They would visit their children or even in some cases share custody. They would buy clothes, food, diapers etc when needed. Then came efforts to corral “dead beat dads”. Social workers would force “single” mothers to turn in fathers of their children or else be denied needed benefits. These men were then put into a system which took away their ability to function as fathers based on their own and their partners circumstances. They were now given set amounts that they had to pay, not directly to their partners or children but to a court system which already considered them criminals. This then became a barrier to finding a job which led to inability to keep up with court mandated payments resulting in incarceration – a vicious circle.

So while you're celebrating Juneteenth on this Fathers' Day, think about what we need to do in order to free thousands of black men to be the best fathers they can be.