Finished: How To Be An Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi. This book was powerful at moments, but very redundant. I had higher hopes for the prose, but the ideas are still very solid and eye-opening. Maybe non-fiction is just harder for me to read. I may have gained the most from the book by some of Kendi's earliest comments such as this one:
"The only way to undo racism is to consistently identify and describe it--and then dismantle it." "The common idea of claiming "color blindness" is akin to the notion of being "not racist"--as with the "not racist", the color-blind individual, by ostensibly failing to see race, fails to see racism and falls into racist passivity."
This really struck a cord with me personally. Those words, plus what is going on in the world today, have made me much more aware that I need to be proactively antiracist. I don't want to be racially passive. Kendi's own personal journey from being racist himself towards his own black people, thinking he, as an educated, middle-class black man was above the poorer, uneducated black man, was very powerful. Towards the end of the book, Kendi and his future wife, Sadiqa, experienced a situation in a restaurant where an obnoxious, drunk white man climbed up onto a stage and started fondling a statue of Buddha to the laughter of his table-mates. Kendi says:
"I had learned a long time ago to tune out the antics of drunk White people doing things that could get a Black person arrested. Harmless White fun is Black lawlessness."
I hope this statement can be overcome in the future, but, sadly, I fear our country has a long way to go to make this happen.
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