At one point, Obama seemed widely viewed as the candidate who "transcends" race. Yet somehow we all knew that the elephant in the room, aka Obama's brown skin, would become an eyebrow-raising issue surrounding his candidacy. Like it or not. Race. Still. Matters.
Well, we have Rev. Wright to thank for unleashing the elephant from the time-out corner. More accurately, we have the offended whites who demanded a reaction from Obama regarding Rev. Wright's comments on race in America.
You can do your own google search on Wright's comments and the resulting storm. In fact, if you don't know about Wright's "God DAMN America," then you should probably skip this blog post and rejoin your regularly scheduled programming under the rock where you reside.
But if you, like me, took interest in Obama's need to respond with a speech on race in America, then keep reading.
As a black woman, I won't pretend to understand what it's like to be white in America. Thankfully, I don't really care much because I'm more interested in my relationships with people and not the presence of melanin in their skin.
But I also won't pretend that my skin color alone never sparked a hurtful response from a perfect stranger. As an individual, my love, kindness, and respect are legally colorblind. But as a country with an unfortunate cargo bay of baggage... Race. Still. Matters.
Curious about sentiments from white America, I found my way to Deacon Blue. Deacon Blue hits the issue from an interesting perspective of diversity. He's a white American embracing Christian values, married to a black woman, raising bi-racial children. I leave you with Blue's assessment of the recent explosion of race surrounding Obama's campaign - as it blossomed through the "inflammatory" remarks of a Christian pastor:
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Shades of Gray
by Deacon Blue Many Christian bloggers whom I respect greatly and read regularly
will never vote for Barack Obama if he gets the nod to be the
Democratic candidate for president of these semi-United States. Of
course, they probably wouldn’t vote for Hillary Clinton, either, but
the point is that they see Obama as a liberal wingnut who will rabidly
support abortions and wild social spending and who won’t support family
and spiritual values.
I respect their views because we all have it
partly right and partly wrong. But for my part, I tend to look at the
other side (read, the GOP) and see a bunch of folks who have no problem
spending our money on pointless wars instead of rebuilding our
infrastructure, systematically enriching the wealthiest at the expense
of both the middle class and
the poor, and claiming to want government to stay out of our personal
lives while simultaneously trying to legislate our morality (OK,
the democrats do that last one, too, I have to admit, plus they try to
legislate healthy behaviors at the expense of personal freedoms).
Guess I just see it differently. I always did, because I’ve
supported Obama from damn near day one and if I hadn’t, his speech
yesterday on race in America would have won me over. Because this wasn’t just a speech about race; it showed a real
Christian who holds faith close and admits his imperfections. He
represents spiritually a lot of what fills and drives me, except that
unlike Obama, I don’t have a church home right now.
But from past experience, I know what it’s like to be deeply involved in a church and not agree with everything the pastor says—nor feel like I have to.
People have called Obama to the carpet to answer for why he’d go to
a church where a pastor makes inflammatory statements and yet they’ve
glossed over the multitude of white candidates over the years whose
pastors or spiritual advisers or religious supporters have views and
statements every bit as fierce and inflammatory, if not worse.
As the husband of a black woman and a father to two biracial
children, I have an insight into black life that most white people
don’t enjoy, so let me tap into that just a little bit to let any
confused non-blacks in on why we shouldn’t give two shits about what
Rev. Jeremiah Wright had to say when it comes to Obama’s presidential
ambitions:
The black church ain’t like the white church.
Stop expecting that a black pastor would refrain from incendiary
political talk from the pulpit at times. Especially if that black
pastor is old enough to have experienced institutionalized racism—government
sanctioned abuse of the black race long after constitutional amendments
and various laws should have settled once and for all that blacks were
every bit as entitled to things as whites were.
I’ll say it again. The black church ain’t like the white church.
Argue all you will that blacks are social services leeches, despite all the numbers that show whites use way more social services dollars—but
long before before the government was willing to give blacks shit for
help, the black church had to serve as the social service center for
blacks. And because whites were so terrified of blacks gathering
together in groups it had to be a political gathering place as well as
being the religious gathering place. It even had to be the fucking
health clinic in many communities.
So if you wonder why passions run high in black churches and why politics are ingrained in them—and
even why a black Christian church like Obama’s church, Trinity, might
recognize Louis Farrakhan for good works in a community—remember
it’s because for too long, America hadn’t been willing to give shit to
black folks…and when it finally did, it gave it out sloppily, made
blacks feel bad about it, structured it to help continue to destroy
family stability, and then f-ing expected it to make up for centuries
of mistreatment.
We’ve come a long way in this country, and that’s good. But we have
a long ways to go, no matter how much white America just wants to have
the race issue just go away.
Obama made clear why it isn’t going away, and why we need to face it
together for once. This is a man who is black…because that’s the way
the people of America see him for the most part. But let’s not forget
he is also half white.
This is a man who can tell it like it is, who can stand up for
himself and others, and take what is so often presented in black and
white and show how much gray there still is—and
how we can make the gray into something more dazzling. He ain’t perfect
by a long shot. He might not even be an earth-shattering president.
But he’s our best chance right now for a fresh start racially and a
chance to get a real Christian in the White House who wears his faith
proudly but also won’t hide behind it (you hear me, Dubya?). He can
question his pastor’s views without having to cast him aside; he makes
his faith part of his life without blindly following some script handed
to him from some religious body.
Yesterday, Obama told it like it was, and I’m proud of him. He’s my brother in Christ, and by God, I hope he’ll be my president.
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Deacon Blue is the author of the blog
Holy Shit from Deacon Blue.