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Top, photograph by David Lagerlöf, Tess Asplund stands with raised fist opposite protesters from the Nordic Resistance Movement in Borlänge, Sweden, May 1st, 2016. Via. Bottom, photograph by Hans Runesson, Kvinnan med handväskan (A Woman [Danuta Danielsson] Hitting a Neo-Nazi With Her Handbag), Växjö, Sweden, April 13, 1985. Via.
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As I’ve worked to dismantle my own internalized racism and the ways that I privilege whiteness, I’ve learned to resist being ‘othered’ through the use of language. So when someone says, ‘Oh, they did that to you because you’re black,’ I quickly correct them with, ‘No, they did that because they are bigots.’ This often shocks people. I can see the panic in their eyes. Sometimes, their eyes dart about. If there are lot of people, they may get quiet.
Sometimes, someone will try to lessen the blow of my words with some clever deflection. I then come back with, ‘No. They are bigots.’ I name the problem. Trayvon and Michael’s blackness wasn’t the problem. The problem was the negative perceptions of that blackness and what spaces that blackness was ‘allowed’ to occupy. These perceptions are supported, funded, and reinforced by institutionalized racism. Matthew Shepard wasn’t murdered because he was gay. Sakia Gunn wasn’t murdered because she was a lesbian. Matthew and Sakia were murdered by people who made a choice to exercise their bigotry within a culture that deemed Matthew and Sakia ‘others.’Toni Bell, from I Am Not Your Token, for The body is not an apology, December 15, 2015. Via.
‘No. They are bigots.’
Date liked: 2016/05/05 16:05:23
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Liked from: fette sans
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