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SPECIAL FEATURE
RACISM: A Black
Perspective
“Racism,
one of the most baneful and persistent evils, is a major barrier to peace. Its
practice perpetrates too outrageous a violation of the dignity of human beings
to be countenanced under any pretext. Racism retards the unfoldment of the
potentialities of its victims, corrupts its perpetrators, and blights human
progress.” (1)
Who will win the RACE?
The
principle and spirit on which this article is based, “is the fundamental basis
upon which the World Order of Bahá’u’lláh is built”, which many of us aspire to
promote. Racism on the other hand is much less examined and understood. Many of
us may be oblivious to its effects on ourselves, on others and on the world
around us, yet we advocate its most potent cure: the oneness of mankind. This
is not a healthy state of affairs. Can the proponents of so potent a cure
induce health, lacking a complete understanding of the disease they seek to
heal? This article is designed in the humblest way to highlight some of those
evils that can corrupt and destroy noble souls on grounds of racial prejudices.
It will seek to highlight some of the effects of racism on the black psyche. I
hope it will in some way bring to attention some points for thought when
teaching people of colour, given the few in number. Race in this context is
important, as Rúhíyyih Khánum recalls the Guardian’s words to the first
Japanese pilgrim, “... when people of different races are incorporated in the
world-wide community and in local communities, who can doubt that it will
possess far greater power and perfection and be something quite different from
what we have now.” (2)
An
embarrassing subject to talk about...
How
intriguing that the English word “race”, means competition or contest. For far
too long, people of different races have been in competition with each other.
We have been taught to see only differences and never in a positive way. In
this competition we see each other as “black” and “white”, in this “race”,
winner and loser and its implication “superior” and “inferior”. It is also
interesting that the words “black” and “dark” have such negative connotations,
generally connected with dirt, evil and malicious forces. As Bahá’ís we say “we
are all one”, that we are “flowers of one garden” but we do strive for “unity
in diversity”, thus, celebrating and appreciating our different racial
backgrounds.
Black men’s Bahá’í gatherings?
Confronted
by racism, we all in our own ways either feel guilty, defensive or simply take
the view that there is no such thing anymore and/or that it does not affect us
personally. Perhaps if we do not speak about it, it does not exist or it will
simply disappear. Those who dare speak of its ugly face may be seen simply as
arrogant trouble makers. It is at times an embarrassing subject to talk about.
If we cringe at the mention of this topic and want to avoid it, then we are in
denial. What is your idea of racist and racism? Someone belonging to an extreme
right wing organisation? Those who do not mix or intermarry with other races?
Is it confined to racially motivated violence? Is that it? Think again! It
would be nice to say that we are not prejudiced and get away with it, because
we simply think the problem is out there and not “in here”.
My
pain, quiet contemplation and to some extent a little known booklet, Black
Men’s Bahá’í Gatherings inspired me to write this article. Reading it was an
experience. There are certainly issues in this booklet I can relate to, growing
up as I did in a humble African Bahá’í
home. I was puzzled at first and wondered; Why do we need a Black Men’s
Bahá’í Gathering in this day and age, when the spirit of the faith is about
unity and oneness? Isn’t it divisive? I began reading this booklet at speed, a
little embarrassed, (even I wanted to believe we are fine). Answers to these
questions and many more came in droves as I contemplated my own upbringing and
my short life.
Why black men’s gatherings? Counsellor Dr
William Roberts, “had for years wondered why black men had not made more
significant contributions to the faith as envisioned by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. He also
noticed something that had puzzled and saddened him: black men appeared to
avoid each other deliberately in order to seek the company of white Bahá’ís. In
other words, and with a high degree of predictability, black Bahá’ís were
trying very hard to become invisible to each other, especially if non-black
Bahá’ís were around." (3) How true, l thought! Were they embarrassed, and
if so what about? Being black? Slowly, the need for and the importance of these
meetings began to sink in. It is about knowing oneself before you know others,
putting your house in order, learning from and connecting with each other,
discovering who you really are - a very Bahá’í teaching.
How can a whole race be healed after slavery?
Time
may have passed since the days of slavery and colonialism, but to a large extent,
black culture, its images and psyche have been shaped by them. “Now look at an
entire race of people who were not just in slavery but, ultimately, abused in
every way imaginable, not just during their formative years but from birth
until death, century after century. How do you heal an entire race?... “To be
human and not to be treated as such then, and for many of us, even now; to be
living in the ‘land of freedom’ and for most of us, not to be ‘free’; to carry
our individual yearnings and pain while accommodating the collective yearnings of our race and forebears; these are the
burdens we carry. This is the primary cause of our pain, this is our plight. We
have so much to unlearn about who we are before our collective healing can
begin and a new identity can be created”. (4)
My
puzzle and pain at seeing so much disunity, hatred and violence among black
men, gets some illumination from this booklet: “Ironically, we tend not to
trust or love other black men, deemed to be on the bottom rung of society’s
ladder .... Whether due to maladies of self-hatred, the social necessity of
avoiding others who also have the stain of powerlessness, our emotional
deprivation can be directly traced to the fragmenting social mechanisms imposed
by slavery, and later, by our inability to find healing in a society which is,
itself, disintegrating”. (5) Amazing!
The
effects of racism on grievous wounds
Consider
for a moment the effects of colonialism on the African psyche and slavery and
its aftermath on the AfricanAmerican/Caribbean psyches. This article affords
insufficient space to detail the true extent and nature of the damage done over
successive generations, nor is that the intention. These wounds include
internalised inferiority beliefs and feelings that black people are less
civilised, less intelligent, less worthy and that being black is a shameful
thing. As a result, some do not set their goals high. Some black women have
internalised these beliefs to such an extent that, for example, they use dye to
lighten their skin. The inherent belief that a white person knows best, is very
much evident even among Africans today, even among some African Bahá’ís. I have
personally witnessed how a white (compared to a black) speaker can attract much
larger Bahá’í gatherings in Africa, whether local or from overseas.
To
some extent black people are not aware of the effect which racism has had on
them. I could give many examples. One example is cited by the American Bahá’í
author, Nathan Rutstein in his book “To Be One”. He narrates the story of Pete,
his black friend, who felt he was inferior and that black people are. He did
not feel safe whenever he saw a black man drive the subway. Rutstein explains
that: “the indoctrination has been so complete that they often accept the prevailing
white man’s view of themselves. Simply put, blacks harbour a subconscious sense
of inferiority, while most whites harbour an inherent sense of superiority.”
(6) This social conditioning or
“brainwashing” can be so complete that the effects of colonialism and racism on
the culture, on the individual and the collective psyche remain unquestioned
and come to be perceived as “normal”.
Confronting
History
The
history of racism is dirty. I do not wish to “release skeletons from the
closet” nor do I intend to make anyone feel guilty. I believe that we need to
look at where we’ve come from, where we are going, and to take a glimpse,
however inadequate, of the origins of our so called “institutionalised” racism.
Racist views have been propagated by so-called learned people, by
“intellectuals” and God forbid, some church ministers, who people regarded as
fathers of free speech and civilised thought at the time. History is awash with
injustices done to the black race, whether through slavery, colonialism or
simply what the Church called “Christianisation of the pagans”, or civilisation
of the savages. In fact, history shows us that the Church gave its blessing to
the slave trade by deliberately manipulating the story of Ham in the Bible and
the master servant relation. Islam is no exception. After all, the East African
slave trade was conducted by Arab slave traders, who, themselves, had no qualms
about it.
For
centuries, a black man was seen as less of a person. In fact the American
constitution of 1787 declared a slave to be three-fifths of a human being. In
“The Mismeasure of Man” which examines the history of so-called “scientific”
evidence about race, Gould quotes the Douglas debates (1858) “....There is a
physical difference between the white and black races which I believe will
forbid the two races living together on terms of social and political equality.
And inasmuch as they cannot so live, while they do remain together there must
be the position of superior and inferior, and I as much as any other man am in
favour of having the superior position assigned to the white race.” (7) Our own
Nathan Rutstein quotes from the “The Inequality of the Human Race” “some of his
[the Black’s] senses have an acuteness unknown to the other races, the sense of
taste and that of smell, for instance... But it is precisely this development
of the animal faculties that stamps the Negro with the mark of inferiority” and
the “Texas Almanac” (1857) “...the African is an inferior being, differently
organised from the white man, with wool instead of hair on his head - with
lungs, feet, joints, lips, nose and cranium so distinct as to indicate a
different and inferior grade of being”. (8)
“Pour
the healing salve of His Praises”
“How
deep this acid has bitten into the souls of other men...” Rúhíyyih Khánum
observes “...When we Bahá’ís go to teach these people, our first act, I firmly
believe, should be to try and give them back their self-respect. Probably the
greatest crime of the white man is that in his folly and conceit in the great
power of his money - civilisation, he has made other men feel inferior .... How
deep this acid has bitten into the souls of other men I suppose we white people
will never know. But I was startled and moved by something I saw during my
African trip. Invariably, whenever I mentioned this injustice of ours, and
denounced it as such, there was a spontaneous burst of applause from my
listeners, whether at the Teaching Conference in Kampala where the cream of the
African Bahá’í Teachers was present or an illiterate audience way out in the
bush ... the arrow is far deeper in the hearts than we dream and we Bahá’ís
should draw this arrow, in the name of Bahá’u’lláh and pour the healing salve
of His Praises and love into the wound.” (9) “So powerful is the light of unity
that it can illuminate the whole earth”.
For
many people, genuine friendship with other races has not been easy. However,
black people have moved on, although cautiously. “After becoming Bahá’ís ...
after experiencing a quality of fellowship with White Bahá’í Males and Females
that we never imagined possible, we could see a future world far different from
the present and the past.” (10) The
Knights of Bahá’u’lláh for most of Africa were not black. They had massive
teaching successes among those who understandably, may have had cause to
distrust them at first. My parents, for example, became Bahá’ís in Colonial
Africa at the height of the freedom movement. It must have been pretty
challenging for them to strike the right balance between supporting the fight
for independence and pursuing a peaceful Bahá’í cause. How did it go down? The
recognition of the message of Bahá’u’lláh is a beginning and not an end in
itself. It can be difficult for us to admit to our inherent prejudices, arising as a result of what might be our
very existence in a world that is corrupted by the evils which surround it,
racism included. After all, the world and the environment in which we as
Bahá’ís live is not perfect, nor are we.
The
way ahead
We
must guard our institutions against what can become institutionalised
prejudices. As Rúhíyyih Khánum frankly shares: “... As up until very recently
the Bahá’ís of the world were almost exclusively white, it is only natural that
their virtues and their faults should have coloured the faith and its community
life. It is illogical to suppose that what we have now is either mature or
right. It is a phase in the development of the cause .... And let us ask
ourselves frankly if we do not believe that what we North American Bahá’ís,
what we Western white Bahá’ís have, is the real thing, practically a finished
product and it is up to the rest of the world to accept it? I think this is our
mentality, it was mine up until a few years ago.” (11) Phew!!
We
must be patient with each other
The
words of the Guardian: “He does not doubt - though it pains him to have to
admit it that there are believers who have not overcome their racial
prejudices. Bahá’ís are not perfect, but they have made a great step forward by
embracing the Faith of God. We must be patient with each other, and realise
that each one of us has some faults to overcome, of one kind or another”. (12)
Not
about mastering political correctness
The
Guardian’s words to Bahá’ís of European Descent: “Let the white make a supreme
effort in their resolve to contribute their share to the solution of this
problem, to abandon once and for all their usually inherent and at times
subconscious sense of superiority, to correct their tendency towards revealing
a patronising attitude towards the members of the other race, to persuade them
through their intimate, spontaneous and informal association with them of the
genuineness of their friendship and the sincerity of their intentions, and to
master their impatience of any lack of responsiveness on the part of a people
who have received, for so long a period, such grievous and slow healing
wounds”. (13) Equally, addressing Baha’is
of African Descent, the Guardian wrote, “Let the Negroes, through a
corresponding effort on their part, show by every means in their power the
warmth of their response, their readiness to forget the past, and their ability
to wipe out every trace of suspicion that may linger in their hearts and
minds”. (14)
It
is not about mastering political correctness or merely by changes in the law,
however important that may be. As Bahá’ís
we cannot afford to fight every social injustice directly. However by
our continued efforts in spreading the “Divine Elixir”, teaching first by
example and by the collective will of the whole, our bright future destiny, as
one human race, will emerge. We have to acknowledge that prejudice is not
confined to one particular group. “Both sides [Blacks and Whites] have prejudices
to overcome; the prejudice which is built up in the minds of a people who have
conquered and imposed their will, and the other the reactionary prejudice of
those who have been conquered and sorely put upon.” (15)
A
South African Bahá’í youth, [not long in the Faith then] once told me, “the
message of Bahá’u’lláh instils in me self respect and peace I have never known
elsewhere, but I regard myself a black man first, a Bahá’í second”. It never
dawned on me what he meant and I never thought much of it. However, in his
short life he had lost so many friends, been tortured, scarred physically and
mentally and he saw human life as worthless. He saw white people as evil and
heartless. I thought he could let go and let live. Forgive and forget. It was perhaps
too soon. Is it not assuring to know that despite what my South African friend
had endured, he had found a caring white Bahá’í who had taught him the Faith,
as he himself puts it, by his example and conduct. Probably the journey towards
inner peace with himself and eventually with other races had began. There are
good people out there.
There
is hope!
1.
The Power of Unity: Beyond Prejudice and Racism, Bonnie J Taylor, p36 (BPT
Wilmette)
2.
Bahá’í News, (Rúhíyyih Khánum Shares Teaching Observations) No. 40,
June 1961
3.
The Black Men’s Bahá’í Gatherings: A Spiritual Transformation, James A Williams
and Ted Jafferson
4.
Ibid
5.
Ibid
6.
To Be One: A Battle Against Racism, Nathan Rutstein, p112,
7.
Ibid, p35
8.
Ibid, p118
9.
Bahá’í News, (Rúhíyyih Khánum Shares Teaching Observations) No. 40,
June 1961
10.
The Black Men’s Bahá’í Gatherings: A Spiritual Transformation, p15, James A
Williams and Ted Jafferson
11.
Bahá’í News, (Rúhíyyih Khánum Shares Teaching Observations) No. 40,
June 1961
12.
The Power of Unity: Beyond Prejudice and Racism, Bonnie J Taylor, (BPT
Wilmette)
13.
Racial Unity: An Imperative For Social Progress, Dr Richard W Thomas Pp135-136
14.
Ibid, p136
15.
The Power of Unity: Beyond Prejudice and Racism, Bonnie J Taylor, p29 (BPT
Wilmette)
Please note the use of the terms “Negro”, “Coloured”, “AfricanAmerican” etc., are consistent with the terms which were in current usage at the times of publication of the various cited excerpts.
Bahá’í International
Community working against racism
The
General Assembly of the United Nations has decided to convene a Third World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related
Intolerance. The Conference will take place in 2001 in South Africa.
As
an international non-governmental organisation, the Bahá’í International
Community will be involved in the World Conference as well as in all the
activities surrounding it. In fact, the Bahá’í International Community is
currently chairing the Interim Steering Committee of NGOs for the World
Conference against Racism, which is based in Geneva. The Steering Committee’s
task is to move the NGO preparations forward.