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Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism
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Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Dec 15, 2015

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Libby Waite
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Page 1: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Racism

Tools to Identify

and

Tools to Work to Undo Racism

Page 2: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Goal is Justice not Guilt

Page 3: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Brothers and Sisters to UsU.S. Catholic Bishops

Pastoral Letter on Racism

Page 4: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Distinguish BetweenPersonal Prejudice and Personal Acts

versus

Systemic and InstitutionalPreferences for Whites

Page 5: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

If the KKK keeps people out of school, we understand that as

racism

Page 6: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

But if Fewer People of Color Can Afford to Attend Private

Schools, College and Graduate Schools Is that Racism?

Page 7: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Racism is “systematized oppression of one race of another. 

In other words, the various forms of oppression within every sphere of social relations—economic

exploitation, military subjugation, political subordination, cultural devaluation, psychological violation, sexual degradation, verbal abuse, etc.—

together make up a whole of interacting and developing processes which operate so normally and

naturally and are so much a part of the existing institutions of society that the individuals involved are

barely conscious of their operation” James Boggs, Racism and the Class Struggle 147-148.

Page 8: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Racismis

Prejudice Plus

Power

Page 10: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Racial JusticeEconomic JusticeGender JusticeAre Intertwined

Page 11: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Racism is a sin

Page 12: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Racism is a sin:

a sin that divides the human family,

blots out the image of God among specific members of

that family, and violates the

fundamental human dignity of those called to be children of the same

Father.

Page 13: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Isn’t Racism Over?

Page 14: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Because the Courts have eliminated statutory racial discrimination and Congress has enacted civil rights

legislation, and because some minority people have achieved some measure

of success, many people believe that

racism is no longer a problem in American life.

Page 15: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Distinguish BetweenPersonal Prejudice and Personal Acts

versus

Systemic and InstitutionalPreferences for Whites

Page 16: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Movement toward authentic justice

demands a simultaneous attack on

both racism and economic oppression.

Page 17: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

The continuing existence of racism becomes apparent

when we look beneath the surface of our national life.

Page 18: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Look beneath the surface

Page 19: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Bishops point to 5 areas that illustrate continuing racism:

EmploymentEducationHousing

Criminal JusticeOpposition to Affirmative Action

Page 20: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.
Page 21: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Education?

• African-Americans receive more and tougher disciplinary action than their white counterparts,

even for the same infraction.• Drop-out rate is far higher than their white

counterparts' rate.

Page 22: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Housing Segregation Patterns

Page 23: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Opposition to Immigrants

Page 24: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Blacks comprise 13 percent of the national population,

but 30 percent of people arrested, 41 percent of people in jail.

Human Rights Watch: Incarceration and Race

Page 25: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Opposition to Affirmative Action:

Page 26: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.
Page 27: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

HISTORY

Racism has been part of the social fabric of America since its European colonization.

Whether it be the tragic past of the Native

Americans, the Mexicans, the Puerto Ricans, or the blacks, the story is one of slavery, peonage,

economic exploration, brutal repression, and cultural neglect.

None have escaped one or another form of collective degradation by a powerful majority.

Page 28: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Founders of Country?

Page 29: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

The educational, legal, and financial systems, along with other

structures and sectors of our society, impede people's progress and narrow their access because they are black, Hispanic, Native

American or Asian.

Page 30: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.
Page 31: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

The structures of our society are subtly racist,

for these structures reflect the values which society upholds.

They are geared to the success of the majority and the failure of the minority. Members of both groups

give unwitting approval by accepting things as they are.

Page 32: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

What is Structural Racism?

Page 33: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Importance of Structure

Page 34: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Can You Restrict With One Wire?

Page 35: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Depends on How You

Arrange the Wires

Page 36: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Structural Racism Directs Us to Examine the Way the Wires

(Institutions) Are Interconnected

Page 37: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.
Page 39: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.
Page 40: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Perhaps no single individual is to blame.

The sinfulness is often anonymous but nonetheless real.

The sin is social in nature in that each of us, in varying degrees, is

responsible.

Page 42: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Under the guise of other motives, racism is manifest in the tendency

to stereotype and marginalize whole segments of the population whose presence perceived as a

threat. Racism is manifest also in the indifference that replaces open

hatred.

Page 43: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.
Page 44: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

The minority poor are seen as the

byproduct of a post-industrial society --

without skills, without motivation, without incentive.

They are

expendable people.

Page 45: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Race Disadvantage

Page 46: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.
Page 47: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

We have long since grown accustomed to thinking of Blacks as being “racially disadvantaged.”

Rarely, however, do we refer to Whites as “racially advantaged,”

even though that is an equally apt characterization of the existing

inequality. Harlon Dalton

Page 49: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

In my class and place, I did not recognize myself as a racist

because I was taught to see racism only in individual acts of meanness by members of my group, never in

invisible systems conferring unsought racial dominance on my

group from birth.

Peggy McIntosh, 1988

Page 50: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Today's racism flourishes in the triumph of

private concern over public responsibility,

individual success over social commitment,

and personal fulfillment over

authentic compassion

Page 51: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

How start to combat racism?

Page 52: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Start with the understanding that racism is “hard-wired” into our society

and institutions.

It is like the electric wires in the walls,or the plumbing,

or the air and heat ductwork.

Invisible. Important. Always There.

It is a life-long struggle for justice.

Page 53: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Be willing to move beyond your comfort zone

Page 54: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Transformative Education

Educate Self and Community about history and reality

of the barriers of structural racism

How it affects us,How it affects others.

Page 55: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

CREATE a safe environment for open and honest discussion

Page 56: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Study Bishops Pastorals

“Brothers and

Sisters All”

Page 57: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Listen to People of Color

Page 58: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

There are resources for

training & expert help

Page 59: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Questions for Reflection

• Personal observations of examples of Prejudice Plus Power?

• Structural or Institutional Racism in community – Housing patterns? Criminal justice? Education – public & private? Employment? Response to Affirmative Action? Economic Justice, Gender Justice

• Not about guilt, but identifying and challenging unearned privilege and replace it with Justice.

Page 60: Racism Tools to Identify and Tools to Work to Undo Racism.

Dr. Shawn Copeland and Bill Quigleyhttp://www.loyno.edu/~quigley/