White Terrorism, Black Terror
There is so much that we can say about "terrorism."
For most people this is something you connect to the most terrible acts humans can commit. You hurt people, soldiers, civilians, anything. You treat them like objects, and use them like weapons, wood to create flames from your political fire. Although we my be accustomed to conceiving that some cultures are more predisposed to commit acts of terrorism that others, in truth we find the potential for this type of human damage within all peoples.
But there is generally a difference in how we assign value and meaning to these acts. Although people may articulate that there is a clear and simple truth to naming something terrorism, this is not the case. People will hedge and fudge constantly when confronted with this type of violence, depending on their relationship to who has committed it and how they see that person in terms of the ideological coordinates that form their identity. Terrorism in its most virulent form, in the minds of most people, is something outsiders, foreigners commit. It is something from the outside that comes inside to threat things that people feel are vulnerable, safe and special. The problem with understanding terrorism is that when it happens locally, within a community, the ability for people to name it or recognize it depends on the racial elements involved. With the shooting in Charleston, we see a clear example where most of the media in the US is resistant to using the language that is used for violent offenders who are not white. We see extra effort going into salvaging this white face, or somehow making it as if something else is responsible for this and his being white is not to blame. In most other cases however, whether it is black kids with guns or Muslims with bombs, their race or their culture becomes key in how people define them as being dealers of terror and violence.
The first article in the three that I've pasted below is particularly interesting. It makes clear that for certain groups, terrorism has been a natural and normal part of their life in the United States.
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White Terrorism is as Old as America
By BRIT BENNETT
June 19, 2015
The New York Times Magazine
For most people this is something you connect to the most terrible acts humans can commit. You hurt people, soldiers, civilians, anything. You treat them like objects, and use them like weapons, wood to create flames from your political fire. Although we my be accustomed to conceiving that some cultures are more predisposed to commit acts of terrorism that others, in truth we find the potential for this type of human damage within all peoples.
But there is generally a difference in how we assign value and meaning to these acts. Although people may articulate that there is a clear and simple truth to naming something terrorism, this is not the case. People will hedge and fudge constantly when confronted with this type of violence, depending on their relationship to who has committed it and how they see that person in terms of the ideological coordinates that form their identity. Terrorism in its most virulent form, in the minds of most people, is something outsiders, foreigners commit. It is something from the outside that comes inside to threat things that people feel are vulnerable, safe and special. The problem with understanding terrorism is that when it happens locally, within a community, the ability for people to name it or recognize it depends on the racial elements involved. With the shooting in Charleston, we see a clear example where most of the media in the US is resistant to using the language that is used for violent offenders who are not white. We see extra effort going into salvaging this white face, or somehow making it as if something else is responsible for this and his being white is not to blame. In most other cases however, whether it is black kids with guns or Muslims with bombs, their race or their culture becomes key in how people define them as being dealers of terror and violence.
The first article in the three that I've pasted below is particularly interesting. It makes clear that for certain groups, terrorism has been a natural and normal part of their life in the United States.
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White Terrorism is as Old as America
By BRIT BENNETT
June 19, 2015
The New York Times Magazine
My
grandmother used to speak of Klansmen riding through Louisiana at
night, how she could see their white robes shimmering in the dark, how
black people hid in bayous to escape them. Before her time, during
Reconstruction, Ku Klux Klan members believed they could scare
superstitious black people out of their newly won freedom. They wore
terrifying costumes but were not exactly hiding — many former slaves
recognized bosses and neighbors under their white sheets. They were
haunting in masks, a seen yet unseen terror. In addition to killing and
beating black people, they often claimed to be the ghosts of dead
Confederate soldiers.
You could argue, of
course, that there are no ghosts of the Confederacy, because the
Confederacy is not yet dead. The stars and bars live on, proudly
emblazoned on T-shirts and license plates; the pre-eminent symbol of
slavery, the flag itself, still flies above South Carolina’s Capitol.
The killing has not stopped either, as shown by the deaths of nine black
people in a church in Charleston this week. The suspected gunman, who
is white and was charged with nine counts of murder on Friday, is said
to have told their Bible-study group: “You rape our women, and you are
taking over our country. And you have to go.”
Media outlets have been reluctant
to classify the Charleston shooting as terrorism, despite how eerily it
echoes our country’s history of terrorism. American-bred terrorism
originated in order to restrict the movement and freedom of newly
liberated black Americans who, for the first time, began to gain an
element of political power. The Ku Klux Klan Act, which would in part,
lawmakers hoped, suppress the Klan through the use of military force,
was one of America’s first pieces of antiterrorism legislation. When it
became federal law in 1871, nine South Carolina counties were placed
under martial law, and scores of people were arrested. The Charleston
gunman’s fears — of black men raping white women, of black people taking
over the country — are the same fears that were felt by Klansmen, who
used violence and intimidation to control communities of freed blacks.
Even
with these parallels, we still hear endless speculation about the
Charleston shooter’s motives. Gov. Nikki Haley of South Carolina wrote
in a Facebook post that “while we do not yet know all of the details,
we do know that we’ll never understand what motivates anyone to enter
one of our places of worship and take the life of another.” Despite
reports of the killer declaring his racial hatred before shooting
members of the prayer group, his motives are inscrutable. Even after
photos surfaced of the suspected shooter wearing a jacket decorated with
the flags of Rhodesia and apartheid-era South Africa and leaning
against a car with Confederate-flag plates, tangible proof of his
alignment with violent, segregationist ideology, his actions remained
supposedly indecipherable. A Seattle Times tweet (now deleted) asked if
the gunman was “concentrated evil or a sweet kid,” The Wall Street
Journal termed him a “loner” and Charleston’s mayor called
him a “scoundrel,” yet the seemingly obvious designations — murderer,
thug, terrorist, killer, racist — are nowhere to be found.
This
is the privilege of whiteness: While a terrorist may be white, his
violence is never based in his whiteness. A white terrorist has unique,
complicated motives that we will never comprehend. He can be a disturbed
loner or a monster. He is either mentally ill or pure evil. The white
terrorist exists solely as a dyad of extremes: Either he is humanized to
the point of sympathy or he is so monstrous that he almost becomes
mythological. Either way, he is never indicative of anything larger
about whiteness, nor is he ever a garden-variety racist. He represents
nothing but himself. A white terrorist is anything that frames him as an
anomaly and separates him from the long, storied history of white
terrorism.
I’m always struck by this
hesitance not only to name white terrorism but to name whiteness itself
during acts of racial violence. In a recent New York Times article
on the history of lynching, the victims are repeatedly described as
black. Not once, however, are the violent actors described as they are:
white. Instead, the white lynch mobs are simply described as “a group of
men” or “a mob.” In an article about racial violence, this erasure of
whiteness is absurd. The race of the victims is relevant, but somehow
the race of the killers is incidental. If we’re willing to admit that
race is a reason blacks were lynched, why are we unwilling to admit that
race is a reason whites lynched them? In his remarks
following the Charleston shooting, President Obama mentioned whiteness
only once — in a quotation from the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
intended to encourage interracial harmony. Obama vaguely acknowledged
that “this is not the first time that black churches have been attacked”
but declined to state who has attacked these churches. His passive
language echoes this strange vagueness, a reluctance to even name white
terrorism, as if black churches have been attacked by some disembodied
force, not real people motivated by a racist ideology whose roots
stretch past the founding of this country.
I
understand the comfort of this silence. If white violence is unspoken
and unacknowledged, if white terrorists are either saints or demons, we
don’t have to grapple with the much more complicated reality of racial
violence. In our time, racialized terror no longer announces itself in
white hoods and robes. You can be a 21-year-old who has many black
Facebook friends and tells harmless racist jokes and still commit an act
of horrifying racial violence. We cannot separate ourselves from the
monsters because the monsters don’t exist. The monsters have been human
all along.
In America’s contemporary imagination,
terrorism is foreign and brown. Those terrorists do not have complex
motivations. We do not urge one another to reserve judgment until we
search through their Facebook histories or interview their friends. We
do not trot out psychologists to analyze their mental states. We know
immediately why they kill. But a white terrorist is an enigma. A white
terrorist has no history, no context, no origin. He is forever
unknowable. His very existence is unspeakable. We see him, but we
pretend we cannot. He is a ghost floating in the night.
Brit Bennett is a writer living in California. Her debut novel, “The Mothers,” is forthcoming from Riverhead Books.
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White militia began to arrest both freemen and slaves, 10 that weekend, and many more in the days that followed. Vesey, a freeman, was captured on June 22. It’s not just the executors of the “war on terror” who have used euphemisms to describe torture. A Charleston official referred to the interrogations the captured men were subject to like this: “No means which experience or ingenuity could devise were left unessayed to eviscerate the plot.”
Then, after a quick trial and guilty verdict, Vesey and five
others were hung on July 2. More arrests were made, and more executions
followed, 35 in total, often in front of immense crowds.
Here’s the historian Ira Berlin, summing up what is known of Vesey’s life:
Maybe others remembered him as well, though it might just be a coincidence that “the clean-shaven white man about 21 years old with sandy blond hair and wearing a gray sweatshirt, bluejeans and Timberland boots” chose the anniversary of Vesey’s preempted revolt to massacre nine members of the congregation Vesey founded.
Or maybe history, along with white supremacy, is just cunning that way.
**************
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The Charleston Massacre and the Cunning of White Supremacy
According to Matt Ford at The Atlantic, the Charleston, South Carolina, church where a white gunman murdered nine people wasThe oldest black church south of Baltimore, and one of the most storied black congregations in the United States, Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church’s history is deeply intertwined with the history of African American life in Charleston. Among the congregation’s founders was Denmark Vesey, a former slave who was executed in 1822 for attempting to organize a massive slave revolt in antebellum South Carolina. White South Carolinians burned the church to the ground in response to the thwarted uprising; along with other black churches, it was shuttered by the city in 1834. The church reorganized in 1865, and soon acquired a new building designed by Robert Vesey, Denmark’s son; the current building was constructed in 1891. It has continued to play a leading role in the struggle for civil rights.Denmark Vesey is one of the most prominent names in America’s long history of racial terror. And the killer didn’t choose just Vesey’s church but his anniversary. Based on fragmentary evidence, white Charlestonians in 1822 came to believe that Vesey’s revolt “would begin at the stroke of midnight as Sunday, June 16, turned to Monday, June 17.” And they identified Vesey’s church as the center of the conspiracy.
White militia began to arrest both freemen and slaves, 10 that weekend, and many more in the days that followed. Vesey, a freeman, was captured on June 22. It’s not just the executors of the “war on terror” who have used euphemisms to describe torture. A Charleston official referred to the interrogations the captured men were subject to like this: “No means which experience or ingenuity could devise were left unessayed to eviscerate the plot.”
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Here’s the historian Ira Berlin, summing up what is known of Vesey’s life:
It is a story well worth the telling. One of millions of young Africans sold into the Atlantic slave marts in the 18th century, the young Telemaque—later transmuted into Denmark—was plucked from a cargo of some 400 slaves by Captain Vesey, who was taken by his ”beauty, alertness and intelligence.” Vesey assigned the lad to his cabin, taught him to read and write, and allowed him to learn a trade—and much else.… The Veseys, both the captain and his slave, eventually alighted in the city of Charleston, mainland North America’s largest slave port. There, Captain Vesey retired to a comfortable respectability, supported in part by the earnings of his slave, who was permitted to hire himself out on his own.… While Denmark Vesey crossed the line from slavery to freedom, he did not…affiliate with Charleston’s growing community of free people of color. These artisans and tradesmen, with light skins that betrayed their mixed racial origins, aspired to the privileges of the master class, whose deportment, speech and values—including slave ownership—they emulated. Rather than being satisfied with a pale imitation of freedom, Vesey became increasingly discontented. In the back alley groggeries and weekly Bible classes, he denounced slavery as criminal usurpation, citing the Scriptures, the Declaration of Independence and even Congressional debates. He sneered at those who accepted bondage and deferred to whites, declaring that they deserved to be slaves. The angry old man awed even those he did not intimidate. Vesey believed slavery would only end with fire, and understood that a successful insurrection rested upon uniting the fragmented black population. While he may have dismissed the assimilationist-minded free people of color, he believed the other elements of the black community could be brought together. To those taken with Christianity, he quoted the Bible. To those mindful of power, he spoke of armies of Haitian soldiers in waiting. To those fearful of the spirit world, he enlisted one Jack Pritchard—universally known as Gullah Jack—a wizened, bewhiskered conjurer whose knowledge of African religious practices made him a welcome figure on the plantations that surrounded Charleston. And while he drew followers from the slave quarter and the artisans’ shops, he also enlisted from the master’s household, recruiting even the personal servant of South Carolina’s governor. Vesey coaxed and cajoled, implored and exhorted, flattered and bullied until his scheme was in place.Berlin writes that “while slaveholders sent Denmark Vesey to the gallows and committed him to an unmarked grave, they failed to consign him to historical oblivion.… Former slaves preserved his memory, even as former slaveholders denied it. Today it seems clear that Denmark Vesey will not remain buried much longer.”
Maybe others remembered him as well, though it might just be a coincidence that “the clean-shaven white man about 21 years old with sandy blond hair and wearing a gray sweatshirt, bluejeans and Timberland boots” chose the anniversary of Vesey’s preempted revolt to massacre nine members of the congregation Vesey founded.
Or maybe history, along with white supremacy, is just cunning that way.
**************
We Were Never Meant to Survive: A Response to the Attack in Charleston
Friday, 19 June 2015 00:00
By Alicia Garza, Truthout | Op-Ed
Wednesday night in Charleston, South Carolina, an act of terrorism
was committed against a group of Black people who gathered in prayer.
The church, Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, was a site of
slave rebellions as far back as 1822 and one of the oldest Black
churches in the country.
Our hearts and our prayers are with the families and communities of those who were needlessly killed.
Yesterday, a 21-year-old white man named Dylann Storm Roof was arrested alive, suspected to be the gunman in this brutal and horrific tragedy. Roof went to the church and asked specifically for the pastor. He prayed with the congregation, and then after about an hour, he rose and said,
The real question we should be asking is: Who taught Roof to hate Black people, enough to kill nine of us, in a sanctuary? And can we really say that he is the only one?
The honest answer to the above question is that this country has never valued Black people - even though Black people have been of extreme value for this country.
We were never meant to survive. We were stolen from our families and our land, brought to this country in the bottoms of boats, chained together like animals. We were forced to work for, nurture and nourish, and build a country that never truly considered us human and still refuses to honor our humanity. The founding documents of this country designate us as only three-fifths of a human being. When we dared (and dare) to reclaim our humanity, we were (and are) beaten, lashed, hung from trees, limbs cut off, set on fire, shot and raped. This isn't something that happened in the past. This is still happening to Black people in 2015. In fact, just a few months ago, Otis Byrd was found lynched, hanging from a tree outside of Jackson, Mississippi.
We were never meant to survive. We argue that Roof's actions are not isolated, are not easily and dismissively attributed to mental illness but instead are reflections of a disease that plagues this country - racism. And we argue that until we grapple, as a nation, with the racist violence that infects this country, we will only see such acts increase.
Roof's words remind us that Black people in this country cannot consider ourselves safe anywhere. We cannot expect protection from the police. We cannot expect to be safe in swimming pools, in churches, in stores, on buses, in our communities or even in our homes. Black children are not safe. And we cannot consider ourselves safe from the daily trauma of witnessing the violence exacted against our communities. In this case, a young Black girl played dead underneath her grandmother's dead body in order to stay alive. Roof left one woman alive, telling her that he wanted her to tell the story of what happened that night.
The truth that needs to be told is that even our nation's first Black President has yet to face the fact that violence against Black people is an epidemic of epic proportions. As the demographics of this country shift to that of majority people of color, there exists both a rational and irrational fear that the very people who have and continue to bear the brunt of such blatant and brutal violence will, at some point, resist. Roof's words, "You're taking over our country. And you have to go" reflect the fear that the right has capitalized on since the 1970s - the fear of the majority becoming the minority.
And, as Black people know so very well, being the minority anywhere can literally mean the difference between life and death.
President Obama made a statement on Thursday, saying, "Once again, innocent people were killed in part because someone who wanted to inflict harm had no trouble getting their hands on a gun." Despite what our president says, this is not merely an issue of gun control. In fact, this is an issue of the prevalence of structural anti-Black racism that results, in many cases, in anti-Black violence, and in too many cases, anti-Black murder.
Across the country and increasingly around the world, Black people - young, old and middle-aged; disabled and differently abled; queer; transgender; immigrant; incarcerated and more - have erupted in a wave of rebellion that has transformed our political landscape. And yet, there are still those who, in the face of extreme and unnecessary violence, will use that as an opportunity to call for peace, to distort the real issues, to essentially neutralize what has been bubbling under the surface for a very long time.
But where are the calls for accountability for those who taught a young white man to harbor such a serious hatred for Black people? Where is the accountability for a nation that has racism in its very DNA?
We, as a country, in the face of even more Black lives taken way before their time, have a choice to make. It is no longer a question of whether or not racism exists, nor is it a question of whether or not racism is an epidemic that plagues our very existence. The choice we have to make is whether or not we are willing to take it on in a real way.
Our lives, quite literally, depend on it.
Our hearts and our prayers are with the families and communities of those who were needlessly killed.
Yesterday, a 21-year-old white man named Dylann Storm Roof was arrested alive, suspected to be the gunman in this brutal and horrific tragedy. Roof went to the church and asked specifically for the pastor. He prayed with the congregation, and then after about an hour, he rose and said,
"I have to do it. You rape our women and you're taking over our country. And you have to go."In the days following this one, many in the media will portray Roof as a mentally ill gunman with a troubled past who committed an isolated crime against an unsuspecting group of Black people. Facebook photos show Roof wearing a jacket with patches bearing the flag of apartheid South Africa. However, we at #BlackLivesMatter would assert that this is not, in fact, an isolated incident, but just one incident in a pattern of violence enacted against Black people in this country and around the world.
The real question we should be asking is: Who taught Roof to hate Black people, enough to kill nine of us, in a sanctuary? And can we really say that he is the only one?
The honest answer to the above question is that this country has never valued Black people - even though Black people have been of extreme value for this country.
We were never meant to survive. We were stolen from our families and our land, brought to this country in the bottoms of boats, chained together like animals. We were forced to work for, nurture and nourish, and build a country that never truly considered us human and still refuses to honor our humanity. The founding documents of this country designate us as only three-fifths of a human being. When we dared (and dare) to reclaim our humanity, we were (and are) beaten, lashed, hung from trees, limbs cut off, set on fire, shot and raped. This isn't something that happened in the past. This is still happening to Black people in 2015. In fact, just a few months ago, Otis Byrd was found lynched, hanging from a tree outside of Jackson, Mississippi.
We were never meant to survive. We argue that Roof's actions are not isolated, are not easily and dismissively attributed to mental illness but instead are reflections of a disease that plagues this country - racism. And we argue that until we grapple, as a nation, with the racist violence that infects this country, we will only see such acts increase.
Roof's words remind us that Black people in this country cannot consider ourselves safe anywhere. We cannot expect protection from the police. We cannot expect to be safe in swimming pools, in churches, in stores, on buses, in our communities or even in our homes. Black children are not safe. And we cannot consider ourselves safe from the daily trauma of witnessing the violence exacted against our communities. In this case, a young Black girl played dead underneath her grandmother's dead body in order to stay alive. Roof left one woman alive, telling her that he wanted her to tell the story of what happened that night.
The truth that needs to be told is that even our nation's first Black President has yet to face the fact that violence against Black people is an epidemic of epic proportions. As the demographics of this country shift to that of majority people of color, there exists both a rational and irrational fear that the very people who have and continue to bear the brunt of such blatant and brutal violence will, at some point, resist. Roof's words, "You're taking over our country. And you have to go" reflect the fear that the right has capitalized on since the 1970s - the fear of the majority becoming the minority.
And, as Black people know so very well, being the minority anywhere can literally mean the difference between life and death.
President Obama made a statement on Thursday, saying, "Once again, innocent people were killed in part because someone who wanted to inflict harm had no trouble getting their hands on a gun." Despite what our president says, this is not merely an issue of gun control. In fact, this is an issue of the prevalence of structural anti-Black racism that results, in many cases, in anti-Black violence, and in too many cases, anti-Black murder.
Across the country and increasingly around the world, Black people - young, old and middle-aged; disabled and differently abled; queer; transgender; immigrant; incarcerated and more - have erupted in a wave of rebellion that has transformed our political landscape. And yet, there are still those who, in the face of extreme and unnecessary violence, will use that as an opportunity to call for peace, to distort the real issues, to essentially neutralize what has been bubbling under the surface for a very long time.
But where are the calls for accountability for those who taught a young white man to harbor such a serious hatred for Black people? Where is the accountability for a nation that has racism in its very DNA?
We, as a country, in the face of even more Black lives taken way before their time, have a choice to make. It is no longer a question of whether or not racism exists, nor is it a question of whether or not racism is an epidemic that plagues our very existence. The choice we have to make is whether or not we are willing to take it on in a real way.
Our lives, quite literally, depend on it.
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