Wednesday, September 17, 2008

this I know: race still matters

A little over 45 years ago, on a humid June night in Jackson, Mississippi, Medgar Evers was gunned down by a White Power Asshole. Medgar was unpacking "Jim Crow Must Go" tshirts from his car at the time he was shot, while his wife and three children waited for him to return home from a long day's work as Field Secretary for the NAACP.

Last night I spent an hour in the house where Medgar was shot. I heard the story of his life's work for racial equality in Jim Crow Mississippi and the ways his family coped with the dangers associated with that work. I saw his blood on the concrete in the carport, and heard the tale of his unjust treatment the night of his death: how there were no ambulances nor police patrol cars available to transport him to the hospital, how his family and neighbors made a makeshift ambulance by placing one of his children's matresses down in the back of a station wagon, and how he was refused treatment at the hospital once he finally arrived.

A 1942 law segregated facilities at hospitals in Mississippi. In 1963 white doctors did not treat black patients to save their lives and the life-saving blood of white folks was withheld from those with black skin. Such pernicious racist practices culminated on the night of June 12, 1963 with the death of Medgar Evers.

It took 30 years to convict the racist son of a bitch whose bullet killed Medgar and left Myrlie Evers a widowed housewife with three small children.

At the Evers' home last night, my husband and I were the only white people present.

Some Many people think that in the year 2008 racism doesn't matter any more; that the problems of slavery and Jim Crow have been left behind as the years have passed, but I'm convinced that these people are wrong. They are either ignorant or blind to the fact of the matter: that racism still plays heavily in the day-to-day lives of many Americans.

So it goes that I'm convinced that racism in America is the second-most insidious socio-cultural innovation to be implemented by humankind for the exploitation of one group by a more powerful group. (The all-time winner of that esteemed honor is, of course, gender.)

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