does this post make me look like a nazi sympathizer?
Working at Homeboy Industries comes with a certain cachet.
Most liberal-to-moderate people love the story of the radical priest who rode
his bicycle into the middle of gang fights and refused to see gang members as
evil incarnate. Today even law enforcement gets the basic axiom that “hurt
people hurt people.” In grant applications, I boast about working with the
“least likely to succeed.” Tour groups pull up to our headquarters by the
busload, partly because people with tattooed faces are still something of a sideshow attraction,
but partly because they’re moved by the idea that all these tatted-up gangsters
have changed their lives for the better. Sometimes tourists sit for hours in our postage stamp of a garden, listening to stories of pain, confusion, relapse and redemption
from literal killers.
So it’s hard to remember what things were like back in the
day. In 1988, when Homeboy was a tiny jobs program at Dolores Mission Church,
gang members were the subject of fear-mongering news reports, (most) cops hated
Father Greg, and Homeboy Industries received bomb threats from community
members who saw his work as condoning society’s most hideous elements. When
police responded to gang homicides, they would tell radio dispatchers that
there were “no humans involved.”
Fr. Greg at a funeral in 1990. (Photo by Anacleto Rapping, Los Angeles Times.) |
To be clear: I am not talking about hating on white
supremacy an institution, because um, yeah, it’s bad. I’m not talking about hating
on elected officials who are tepid and slow in their response to public
displays of hate, because those guys have power and a platform and they can do
better. I’m talking about your “average,” disaffected white guy who joins a
scary-ass movement because he’s scared. I’m not equating that guy with gang
members, exactly; this is not apples to apples, because gang members invariably
come from poor, disenfranchised communities and white supremacists do not
always. But sometimes they do.
And just as gang members who choose to heal—because gang
membership has failed to bring them safety or happiness, because someone showed
them a bit of kindness and opened a door to another way of life—will tell you
that they’re no longer falling for the myth that their “enemies” are their
enemies, so will ex-Nazis tell you that people of color and Jews are not their
enemies. Both are groups who fell for a lie perpetuated by white supremacy.
White supremacy as an institution wants gang members to keep killing each
other, and it wants poor angry white people to hate everyone who isn’t them.
Nazi gang member. |
My friend Marcos. |
My feeds are full of white people yelling at other white
people to stop being Nazis. To stop being racist. To implicate and flagellate
ourselves if we want to be taken seriously as non-Nazis. They’re full of vague
condemnations of what their other white friends aren’t saying (“Can’t help but notice that some of you are awfully quiet,” observes the collective Big Brother). They’re full of people saying If you voted for Trump, get out of my life right now.
At best, these kinds of posts are cries from people who want
to make the world a better place and are frustrated by their own helplessness
and the complacency of their own people. Many of these people regularly do the
things that actually make a difference: call their electeds, donate money and
time. That’s more than I do on many days.
But it’s also a looootttt of virtue signaling and a lot of
deflection. “Maybe if I proclaim loudly that I hate Nazis and, better yet, that
white people all suck, no one will notice that on some level I’m a white person
who likes cake also.”
At 8 am, seven FB friends shared this sketch. By 10:30 am, the backlash had shouted them down. |
I love seeing Americans stand up against fascism and
hatred—showing up at rallies, putting on angel wings against Fred Phelps and
his minions. But I can never work up a lot of energy for people taking swings
at easy targets, which is what declaring your disdain for Nazis on social media
and painting them as subhuman basement-dwellers is.
I’ve read three things recently that speak to what I’m
working through here:
- This post by Myriam Gurba, a queer Latina/Polish writer who is suspicious of the essentialism and religiosity present in “whiteness is terrorism” ideology
- This Clickhole article, whose headline gets to the heart of what I see as the real problem: My Republican Colleagues Must Condemn Racist Violence and Go Back to Peacefully Passing Racist Laws
- This post by Karissa Tucker, a young white writer and soul-searching Christian, who ponders the gap between caring and activism
Next to me right now, AK is reading a book called Raising Cain: Protecting the Emotional Life
of Boys. She just sighed and said, “I wish Trump’s father had read this.”
Because pain and cruelty create hate, create a lack of
empathy.
Nazis: not a fan of my people. |
Maybe it sounds soooo 2015, but I still think love wins. So, dear justice-hipsters who love Homeboy and who are denouncing whiteness and Nazis, and pretending morality is an identity and not a
thousand daily decisions, if you really want to be ahead of the curve, try some
radical love. It hurts, and it’s hard, and I wouldn’t ask anyone to do
something that would personally put themselves in harm’s way. But that’s what
makes it radical.
Comments
There is only the opportunity for change if we do listen and not in that intolerably condescending I'm-educated-so-I-can-understand way. If we listen and encourage dialogue instead of posturing there may be a chance for the upcoming generations.
And that's what we try to do in class.
Thank you for this amazing post.
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