Beyond Empathy Next Steps in Talking About Race

[Music]

laura and i are not really

activists we were too young in the 1960s

when being called a baby boomer was

kind of cute and some would say that

we’re too old

now that we’re in our 60s

and it was not our intention to make

social justice marches a rite of passage

for our grandchildren

but in january 2017

when we joined the women’s march in

nashville we took damon along

it was just a few weeks before his 13th

birthday

in the summer of 2020

after the world witnessed the knee on

the back of a man’s neck

for the last eight minutes and 46

seconds of his life

we we joined a march for racial justice

chelsea wanted to go along it was just

weeks before her

13th birthday i was putting finishing

touches

on a blog post when i first heard the

name of george

floyd that post was about two men

who did not die travis

and his work partner kevin are the are

the two black

furniture delivery workers who were

driving out of a gated community

after making a delivery they were in a

truck

marked with the company name they they

were wearing company uniforms

they were leaving the gated community

as they were about to exit the gate a

car pulled up to prevent their exit

the white driver got out of his car and

began

asking questions which travis did not

did not feel compelled to answer what

are you doing here

why are you here where are you coming

from

all you have to do is just tell me where

you’re going

and if in a few minutes another white

man walked up

and joined the interrogation after about

an

hour the white man the white man who had

received the delivery

vouched for travis and kevin and they

were allowed to leave

what did these white men see when they

encountered

travis and kevin their bias was more

than implicit

all they could see is some something

sinister

and two black men leaving that community

and they felt it was their duty to

apprehend the

apprehend these men as if their white

skin deputized them

with a bad of law enforcement i wrote to

inspire empathy for travis and kevin

i didn’t know that other more tragic

actions

would actually invite that feeling and

the subsequent

subsequent responses empathy was

everywhere that summer

many gained a crash course in empathy

even if only for a moment

a few days or a few weeks

that that some summer i was contacted by

people

people i barely knew people who were

friends of friends

many many of those contact attacks were

focused on

care for me it felt a little strange to

me because my life didn’t feel

any more vulnerable after that infamous

8 minutes and 46 seconds than before

but the marches the calls for policy

change

the drive to process and understand

events

were new and this and they were driven

by empathy

we talk about trying to walk in

another’s shoes

but empathy can fade and it can grow

distorted into something like pity

we can all become weary of social action

when the dust settles we all all go back

into our silos of like people

like-minded

a like ethnically alike ideologically or

whatever

but what are some some everyday ways to

combat injustice

without burning out one starting place

is to cultivate cultivate curiosity

and i mean a petite a particular kind of

curiosity

it is not warriorism warriorism or

culture cultural tourism or demands for

attention

in their legitimate quest to understand

some

people have demanded great emotional

labor from black people

to explain things but there are

legitimate way

legitimate ways to cultivate curiosity

and satisfy it we can educate ourselves

to 2020 exploded with black voices

and allies of all stripes who can lead

the way in

anti-racism keep amplifying them

and keep educating yourself with their

books websites

webinars podcasts films and workshops

and exercise the power of proximity if

we are in

environments of people who are just just

like us

it’s difficult to maximize curiosity but

if we find ways

to be around people who are different

from us

to to work with serve with even play

with

we me we make the most of curiosity

for some of us 2020

ended with a bang december 25th

christmas morning a bomb explo

exploded in downtown nashville we heard

the explosion

although i lived 10 10 miles away from

from downtown

the explosion damaged multiple buildings

and disabled uh communication

throughout tennessee and surrounding

states the investigation quickly

centered on one man

who perished in the bombing

when we saw where the man lived we were

stunned

although the bombing took place 10 miles

from us

the bomber lived only four blocks from

us

i have walked up these steps and

although

although i never met the man i have

knocked on the door

next to his i’ve knocked on the doors of

his

neighbors in in the adjacent cul-de-sac

i was knocking on doors for the u.s

census

and while it was just a job i found

enjoyment

in meeting people especially in our

neighborhood

southeast nashville is home to a grand

array of cultures

and we got to hear people’s stories i

was breeding my curiosity

even while asking prescribed questions

in that cul-de-sac i spoke to a woman

who is a first

generation uh us-born citizen with a

family from guatemala

down the street from me were immigrants

from laos

one naturalized citizen from honduras

stared me down and waited for me to

complete another interview

before approach approaching me and

asking me to interview him

he led me to his apartment where he his

wife

pulled out her phone and activated her

translation app

they were excited to tell their story

and to be counted

as valuable as both empathy and

curiosity

are i think the most important attitude

and practice

to go forward with it is humility

this is especially the case if we are

part of

any dominant culture in our society

this this chosen humility is not based

on

a presumed superiority it must come

from a deep down acknowledgement that

our society rewards certain people

for sin simply simply be being born

with a particular gender sexual

orientation

geographical location economic

situation or ethnicity but each of us

can exercise the humility

that reminds us that no one else

approaches the world in exactly the same

way that we do regardless of who we are

in her book raising white kids dr

jennifer harvey and

her to his parents of white children to

promote what she calls

race consciousness for her race

conscious

parenting involves noticing and naming

race

early and often a few years

ago seven-year-old zoe my white grand

granddaughter spotted dr harvey’s book

when i was preparing for a workshop she

giggled

pipa people sometimes have funny names

for books

this book is called raising white kids

that’s funny so i tried practicing what

dr harvey suggested

do you know do you know what why that

book was written i asked

joey zoe shrugged well because

a lot of a lot of white people think of

themselves as

normal and of everyone else is different

they don’t think about being white i

know you think about it because you have

a black grandfather

and we talk about being black and white

plus

you go to a school where there are a lot

of brown people

and only a few white kids

so you can see yourself as normal and as

different

and you can see your friends as normal

and as different

but a lot of white people can only see

themselves as normal and everyone else

is different

that’s why there’s this book in reality

diversity means that we are all normal

and we are all different

different inclusion means that we

treat each person as unique

we all want to be counted but we are

unique in our combination of

cultural identities it might seem

counterintuitive

but one way to develop cultural humility

is to get in touch with our own cultural

identities

dr michael emerson gives his his

university students an

interesting assignment he says for the

next 24 hours

any time you refer to someone who is

white

identify them as white so if you’re

telling someone about your professor

say my white professor if you if you’re

talking about your friend say my white

friend

when the students report back dr emerson

sees a familiar pattern

the students who consider themselves

white struggle with this exercise

it is uncomfortable for them many of

them have

never thought about about their

whiteness

the students of color seem to have less

difficulty

but each of us is different a few years

ago

i gathered some of my white

grandchildren ages three to ten

to to read a holiday story it was

maggie’s

gift by katherine patterson

the story features mr mcgee a lonely

and cranky older widower who who agrees

to take in eight-year-old an

eight-year-old girl

and her five-year-old brother who

who have to vacate their children’s home

on christmas eve

as he’s on the phone discussing

arrangements with miss trainer from from

the children’s home

he asks by the way by the way

what color are the children white she

says

does it matter yes he says

i have to know know what color to get

the doll

i’ve read this story aloud on many

occasions but this time this passage

struck me

i had dr harvey’s advice in in the back

of my mind

name race early and often

i paused the reading to explain to my

white grandchildren

when this story was written most people

believed

that white people should have only white

baby dolls and black people or brown

people

should have black or brown dolls

ten-year-old chelsea

picked up the narrative yeah in those

days

black people and white people weren’t

allowed to be together

like if you you were white and you

wanted to marry someone who is black

you couldn’t martin luther king said

that you can marry whoever you want

the color doesn’t matter it’s like

chocolate ice cream

and vanilla you can mix them together

and then you have caramel i know

not the perfect analogy or analysis but

she was ten

and how about that heart her loving

and lovely sentiment came through

then six-year-old zoe chimed in

my baby doll is brown i know

i said and i know because

the day she broke the day she brought

that baby doll home

from from the dollar store she

introduced us

she said pipa this is my baby

and she’s like you i named her moana

i’ll call her my baby but you call her

moana

she’s like you i was gonna get the white

one

but it was too much i pushed a little

was the white one the same kind of doll

yeah she said

but this one was almost free the white

one

was ten dollars this is this is one way

to get in touch with our own racial

stories

name race in our own lives from the

from the beginning of when we were aware

of race

once we become curious about our own

lives

we can begin genuine curiosity

about others and begin to be to develop

humility

i didn’t really want to tell my own

story but it crept

up on me it was from my freshman

year intramural basketball had begun

and although i’ve never excelled in any

sports

i have long loved basketball i joined

the matthews hall

team and it wasn’t long before my

inability

my inabilities were discovered perhaps

to cope

my teammates came up with the nickname

pearl

in homage to earl the pearl monroe who

is the spectacular play

spectacular player in his prime with the

new york knicks

the nickname was meant to be both

affectionate

and insulting and coming from guys

who were all taller whiter and richer

than me

there was a racial element that was

meant to be ironic

i knew all of this the joke of course

was that the worst basketball player on

our team

was the only black guy my offense

defense or non-offense

is not the primary issue my indignation

is not the problem

sometimes impact goes beyond offense

sometimes impact goes right to

self-concept

and this is why calls for racial justice

or or any justice

are not just about me my feelings or my

indignation

they are about treating our fellow human

beings

decently humility is never a destination

it’s

never a destination it is an attitude

an awareness a process and a practice

i’ve said in the past that race is not

real but

it does matter what i mean is is

the idea of race as we commonly refer to

it

is not scientifically verifiable but it

is

uh socially undeniable to address the

skeptics

i would would i would want to

speak to a young black man who was out

jogging

or a young black woman who was sleeping

at home

or a black man whose face was pressed

against the pavement

for 8 minutes and 46 seconds those

people are not available

but we have access to activists scholars

practitioners

and policy makers and more than that we

all have access to our own stories

and and the stories of those around us

an ancient text promotes acted justly

loving kindness and walking humbly

also develop empathy

cultivate curiosity practice

humility these actions will not

single-handedly

give us a just and inclusive society

but we cannot approach inclusion and

justice

without them