White Privilege refers to the unearned benefits that some enjoy simply by having "white" skin. This blog is not about being guilty, but rather, being responsible. The privilege is at the expense of people of color but white people cannot maintain this system of privilege without losing a part of their own humanity. This social blog is dedicated to reclaiming our humanity through antiracist analysis, reflection, and storytelling. Send submissions: cjbalive@hotmail.com
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Random Thoughts on White Privilege by Authortee
Most of my blog posts at http://americasbirthdefectembra.blogspot.com/ are spurred by personal observations or experience. What spurred me to write this post today was watching HGTV for several hours. As I watched several shows featuring multi-million homes [one worth $185M], I again noticed that every homeowner was white. This caused me, once again, to think about white privilege.
Some may ask for a definition of white privilege. Still others question its very existence. There are many who have written about white privilege and who have defined it. The concept of white privilege almost demands a discussion [and definition] of "race." I will save that discussion for another blog post. I like to define white privilege as the inherited ability to have access to resources that are: (1) taken for granted [often not even thought about]; (2) an inherited sense that one is not "the other;" and (3) inherited power.
I must add that while white privilege is most evident in wealthy white people, white privilege also extends to non-wealthy white people. In North America, white privilege is the norm. Peggy McIntosh [a white woman], who travels and lectures extensively on white privilege describes it much more eloquently than I in her article "White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack."
A white person born in the U.S. is born with access to many resources that remain unavailable, at least in large part, to non-whites. This includes better schools, homes in better neighborhoods, ability to gain job interviews and land jobs, lack of denial for resources solely because of skin color and automatic acceptance into a club that excludes non-whites. There are social norms and expectations, based on historical events and current practices, which elevate whiteness to be the norm.
The advantages of being white are numerous. Probably the most important advantage is the sure knowledge that decisions made about you are not based on your race. You're confident in the knowledge that the reason you were denied housing, a job or college entry, was not because of your race. White people can choose to be around people who look like them most of the time. White people see themselves widely represented [positively] in all forms of media. A negative action, behavior or crime committed by a white person is not an indictment of the entire race, e.g., the white people on "The Jerry Springer Show" do not represent all white people.
Some people argue that the problems are socio-economic based and not race-based. "Poor is poor," many say. While socio-economics do, indeed, play a role in access to resources, a child born with white skin is automatically a member of an exclusive club, a club whose members already have the advantage. Consider, also, two men in their fifties, one black, one white. The white man [born into white privilege] has already climbed the ladder of success. At a young age, he had access to better educational facilities, access to better, higher-paying jobs [with benefits], access to partners successful in their own right or with inherited family resources, the ability to purchase one, two or even three homes and the ability to pass on these privileges to yet another generation. By his mid-50's, he is no longer chasing the dream. He has lived and experienced the dream and is now looking forward to years of leisure - if he so chooses. The non-white man, on the other hand, is still chasing his dreams. He began his life as "the other," already behind, not a part of, the norm. He spends his entire life being pre-judged and then judged by the color of his skin. His skin color may deny him access to better schools as a child, prevent his entry into higher education, relegate him to entry-level jobs and deny him access to financial resources. In short, he has spent his entire life attempting to prove that despite him being "the other," he is capable, he is intelligent, he is not this, he is not that. Even in his mid-50's, he lacks the financial security of his white counterpart. Instead of looking forward to a leisurely retirement in a few years, he is still struggling just to make ends meet.
Most white people do not recognize their white privilege. It is as much a part of them as their white skin, their grandfather's nose, their great-grandmother's blue eyes. You get up every day and its existence doesn't cross the mind.
My intent in this post, and indeed on all the posts in this blog, is not to anger, but rather to make the reader think, examine and discuss.
Saturday, May 05, 2012
Sunday, April 29, 2012
White Wash by Wendy-O Matik
Aug. 18, 2009
While sleep escapes her
she lists her confessions.
I was conceived in part because of race
this was 1966
I was delivered in a white-walled hospital on white bed
sheets
beside the spirit of thousands of white babies before me
amidst white doctors
and white nurses
while people of other races
held the janitorial jobs—
scrubbing toilets, dumping garbage
serving food, doing laundry
I grew up in a predominantly
white neighborhood
because white privilege bleached the streets
in the image of their choosing.
I went to schools packed with a predominantly
all-white student body with all-white teachers
and all-white administrators and all-white textbooks
transcribing an dominant Eurocentric colonialist perspective
whose white privilege excluded the accomplishments
and
contributions of people of color
because they were taught to do so.
White employers hire me
based on my privilege of white reflection
I gain entry into places because of my white status—
universities, clubs, bars, jobs, organizations of the elite
summer camp, student exchange program
Because of my whiteness
I am excluded and protected
from gangs, juvie, prison, military service, racial
profiling
and other lower socio-economic traps
I am permitted unlimited entry
to free drugs, parties, neighborhoods, stores, and gated
communities
without suspicion or second-guessing of my right to be there
because I am a gold-card-carrying white person
with detailed, specified entitlements
they serve me and my white brothers and sisters
without questions
respectively and accordingly.
I am alive and here today
in this white-washed apartment
owned by my white landlord
holding this job, savings account, car, clothes, and all the
rest
thanks to my sweet little white ass.
And believe me,
when I tell you,
that I never forget it,
nor the heavy responsibility
that comes with it.
Wendy-O Matik
Sunday, April 22, 2012
How to go from being non-racist to anti-racist
1.
Stay with discomfort
2.
Monitor defenses: being humble and keep mouth
shut until you no longer feel defensive
3.
Allow guilt and transform it into motivation
4.
Think of racism as personal/interpersonal but be
clear that these interpersonal interactions happen within systems and
institutions- that the systems depend on people to reinforce them and that
people can also reinforce systems of racism and oppression
5.
Keep a both/and attitude (as opposed to
either/or). For example, many white people have worked hard to get what they
have AND they had a lot of help from the benefits of white privilege
6.
Be vigilantly mindful: at any given moment
consider how whiteness and privilege are playing out or have played out in this
moment.
7.
Take active responsibility for the personal
behavior AND the systematic arrangements in your community. Do not enact the
privilege of being able to live seemingly unaffected by these issues- the
privilege of non-action
8.
Consider the costs of white supremacy/privilege
for the dominant (white) group.
9.
Do your best to make racism and whiteness
visible by naming it when you see it- out loud, even if it may damage personal
bonds with other white people
10. Get
comfortable with resistance and defensiveness- don’t let your ego be bothered
by people’s responses to your concerns.
11. Stop
believing that addressing issues like this is an extracurricular activity
called “activism”- this is an issue of human and communal suffering, not
politics
Segregated Sanghas: How Spirituality Is Connected to White Privilege
If you step into a meditation class
in The United States, the chances are the room will be filled with mostly middle-upper
class white folk. Often however,
the spiritual practice that is being taught has originated in a location with
very few white people. This is obviously not because Caucasians and/or
Americans of European decent are the only ones interested in meditation or
Buddhism. In order to strengthen
our spiritual communities, it behooves us to contemplate the state of our sangha as well as the state of our mind.
First,
let us consider how Buddhism came to America. From the beginning, Buddhist communities were affected and
changed by racism. The first Buddhist temples in the U.S. were Chinese temples
built in San Francisco in the second half of the 19th Century. These
temples were seen as suspect by the dominant white community. These prejudices
were based on ignorance and racial stereotypes. The 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act
as well as the 1924 Immigration Act greatly curtailed emigration from Asian
countries and therefore the growth of Buddhism in the United States.
Furthermore, in an effort to be more accepted as U.S. Citizens many Asian
Americans converted to Christianity. This is especially true of Japanese
Americans during World War II.
Buddhism
began to have a mainstream appeal in the U.S. during the 60s as beat poets and
hippies began to practice the Dharma.
While many young people of color were working hard towards civil rights
in the 60s, many young white people were on a more personal, spiritual
quest. For some it was a passing
phase or just another consciousness-bending experiment but others took it very
seriously. Some of these more
ardent practitioners decided to go to countries like Japan, Thailand, and Tibet
to learn about Buddhism in the countries from which it came. Of these sojourners, most were men and
most were white. These were the people that could afford the privilege of
traveling to another country for an extended amount of time. Some of these men
returned to the U.S. and began to spread the Dharma via a mass media system
that was dominated by white people. In doing so, they became iconic spiritual
leaders. It is important to note that this is not a critique of their intention
or sincerity. Nor does it take away from how hard these practitioners have
worked. However, understanding the
social conditions in which Buddhism and meditation have become popularized in
the United States will help us understand its lack of diversity.
Even though your accommodations at foreign monasteries may be
minimalist and free, it still takes money to get there and back. Racism and
poverty have been inextricably linked in the United States. A white person is
simply more likely to be able to afford such a journey. Furthermore, a white
person may feel safer traveling, even to a non-white country. In her article
“White Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack”, Peggy McIntosh notes that
part of white privilege is being able to travel alone or with a person of one’s
own race without expecting embarrassment or hostility. In this day and age of terrorism and
racial profiling, travel can be more difficult for people of color. Each year,
many young US citizens travel around the world. Many of them feel it is their
right to do so. Many white spiritual seekers carry with them this same sense of
entitlement. While there is nothing innately wrong with their desires, it
highlights an example of a privilege that should be available to anyone, not
just those with privilege. It is likely that white practitioners have to work
diligently to carve out the time and money to make these opportunities happen.
This does not mitigate the fact that a person of color would likely have to
work harder for the same opportunities.
Another
privilege that whiteness brings is the freedom to choose whether or not to
participate in social justice or anti-racist work. For people of color, the
choice is one of self-preservation and survival. The consequence to this is
that white people have the privilege to be more focused (energetically,
financially, and socially) on themselves and issues of personal significance,
issues such as spiritual growth. White people are more likely to have more time
off and more money to devote to their practice.
Money
is another difficult issue for postmodern American Buddhists. In Buddhist
countries like Thailand and Sri Lanka the culture is oriented towards
supporting spiritual practitioners. People of all sectors of society contribute
greatly to the proliferation and maintenance of Buddhism, similar to the way
Christianity is supported in the U.S.
Without that social or cultural support, Buddhist meditation centers
that are not tied financially or socially to Buddhist countries struggle to
exist. However, the United States is a capitalist country and the market place
has helped Buddhism flourish. Self-help books are among the most widely read
and best selling in the country. Buddhism, especially so-called Vipassana
meditation has, as it has assimilated to the western-conditioned mind, embraced
and integrated both western psychology and economics. Any Barnes and Nobles will have a Buddhism or Self-Help
section with books by Jack Kornfield, Joseph Goldstein, Susan Salzberg, Thich
Nhat Hahn, Suzuki Roshi and of course The Dalai Lama. The first of these three
authors are arguably the leaders of mainstream American Buddhism. Besides being
best selling authors, all three have founded the countries leading retreat
centers. Despite the fact that the traditions in which they practice come out
of India, Burma and Thailand, all
three are of European decent, all three are white. All three lead several
retreats per year that cost hundreds of dollars per participant. More often
than not, it is white folks who can afford such retreats. It is through their books and retreats
that many U.S. citizens discover Buddhism. It is through their work that the
infrastructure of what is arguably the most popular form of Buddhist meditation
in this country was created. This
poses a conundrum for these Buddhist leaders, a modern-day economic koan if you
will. How does Buddhism survive in a market-based society without excluding
those against whom the market discriminates [read: without excluding poor
people and people of color]?
To
their credit, most major U.S. Buddhist traditions, schools, and retreat centers
have some sort of diversity program. Some offer scholarships to people of
color. A few meditation centers now offer retreats and classes that are exclusively
for people of color. This segregated solution is no doubt important. Meditation
requires, above all, a place in which one feels safe and respected. These
groups offer people of color that safety as well as an opportunity to talk
about issues specific to non-white practitioners. After all, if meditation
brings to the surface our deepest wounds, who can argue against a space for
people of color to heal from the wounds of racism?
However,
this solution does not address why such groups may be necessary in the first
place, or why Buddhist teachers, monks, and authors in the United States are
disproportionately white. For this
we look again at the institutional and systematic underpinnings of racism. The
leaders of many Buddhist retreats are authors. It has always been more
difficult for people of color to publish books, especially if they are not
related to racism or social justice. White privilege comes in the form of white
networks. Most authors get published in the same way many people get jobs:
through personal networking. White people are simply more likely to network
with other white people. Spiritual networks are not so different from any
social network. People tend towards people like themselves. Christians practice
with other Christians and Muslims with Muslims, etc. There are black churches
in the south and white churches in the suburbs. So, Buddhism has a similar
though less acknowledged segregation. These white networks offer not just book
deals, but job positions at retreat centers as well. It is rare to go to a lay
Buddhist retreat and see a person of color on staff.
The
irony is that even though there are many, many Asian-American families still
quietly practicing Buddhism, and even though a white person may still be a
novelty in a Thai monastery, it is this white face that is now the face of
Buddhism in the United States.
Often when the term “American Buddhism” is spoken, it is not referring
to the generations of Asian Americans who have been practicing Buddhism in the
United States. While one cannot argue that spirituality is reserved for white
people, it seems clear that skin color affords one more opportunity for
spiritual development. Combined
with institutional and systematic discrimination within the media and market
systems, people of color seem to have less access to Buddhism classes or
retreats or may simply feel emotionally unsafe in such white-dominated
spaces. Just like in any spiritual
endeavor, there is no singular easy solution to fighting racism. However, in
upcoming articles I hope to explore these themes in greater detail as well as
discuss how white people on the path can be spiritual and social allies for
people of color on the path.
Christopher
Bowers is an MFT intern and writer. He hosts a social blog about white privilege at www.whitepriv.blogspot.com and another blog of his own creative
fiction and non-fiction writing at www.cryingjustbecause.blogspot.com. Feel free to contact him at cjbalive@hotmail.com
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