Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Beyond racial prejudice

The deaths of the Blacks in the US have become symbolic indictment­s not just of the police but of the broader society

- KANISHK THAROOR

In recent years, Americans have had to grapple with many instances of overzealou­s police officers killing black men. Last Tuesday, police in North Carolina killed Keith Scott as he was waiting to pick up his son. Another man, Terrence Crutcher, was shot dead in Oklahoma while standing next to his broken-down car. In both cases, police initially claimed that the men posed an immediate threat. Video evidence suggested otherwise, revealing that officers acted aggressive­ly and callously.

Scott and Crutcher are only the latest names to be added to a litany of well-publicised police killings. The deaths of (to name just a few) Michael Brown in Missouri, Freddie Gray in Baltimore, Alton Sterling in Louisiana, Philando Castile in Minnesota, and 12-year-old Tamir Rice in Cleveland awakened the country to its abiding problem with race, in general, and the criminalis­ation of black men, in particular. They sparked the most compelling new energy in American politics, the “Black Lives Matter” movement. Its simple message has percolated through popular and public culture, from Beyonce to Hillary Clinton. Supporters see Black Lives Matter as the next phase in the American quest for civil rights. It tries to advance the process set in motion by the abolition of slavery in the 19th century and continued by the fight against segregatio­n in the 20th century, that ongoing struggle to address structural racism in America.

Much of the conversati­on around these tragic killings revolves around police procedures and racial bias. An unarmed black man is 3.5 times more likely to be shot by the police than an unarmed white man. Thanks to video-enabled smartphone­s, incidents that might have once been buried have now reached the knowledge of the public. If you have the stomach for it, you can watch Michael Slager, a white policeman in South Carolina, gun down from behind Walter Scott, an unarmed black man who was only guilty of driving with a broken taillight.

Before killing the unarmed Crutcher in Oklahoma, police officers were recorded referring to him as a “big bad dude”. The body of a black man is seen as an inherently guilty object, worthy of brutal treatment. As the poet Claudia Rankine writes: “Because white men can’t police their imaginatio­ns, black men are dying.”

The deaths have become symbolic indictment­s not just of the police, but of the broader society. These awful episodes peel back the crust of American life and expose its glaring inequities. The Harvard statistici­an Sendhil Mullainath­an argues that police target black men for reasons beyond mere racial prejudice. “The deeper you look, the more it appears that the race problem revealed by the statistics reflects a larger problem: the structure of our society, our laws and policies,” he wrote in the New York Times. Deadly police encounters open wider questions about the immiserati­on of black communitie­s, the abiding segregatio­n of schools and housing, and the unequal applicatio­n of laws and sentencing.

More than ever before, these issues have swum to the surface of American attention. Writers like Rankine (who won the National Book Award for “Citizen,” a powerful examinatio­n of the banality of racism), Ta-Nehisi Coates and Mychal Denzel Smith have gained deserved plaudits for building a new public conversati­on about race. Black voices have rarely enjoyed such serious regard and discussion.

At the same time, they face a backlash from white conservati­ves, who refer to black activists as “thugs”. A few terrible retaliator­y murders of policemen by black gunmen have also allowed conservati­ves to deflect the structural critique posed by Black Lives Matter. There is an entrenched reluctance to accept racism as a major part of America’s past and present. In an interview with the Guardian, a Donald Trump campaign chair in Ohio traced the history of racial divisions to only 2008. “I don’t think there was any racism until [Barack] Obama got elected,” Kathy Miller said. “Growing up as a kid, there was no racism, believe me.”

That startling naivety is matched by the indignatio­n of conservati­ves when confronted with their own racism. Over the summer, Paul LePage, the outspoken right-wing governor of Maine, reacted furiously to the suggestion that certain comments he made were racist (which they indisputab­ly were). He snapped that calling a white man a racist was “like calling a black man the ‘N’ word”.

It’s revealing that LePage believed the accusation of racism was as bad as racism itself. The horrific deaths of black men at the hands of the police are forcing many Americans into the long overdue awareness of their whiteness and its attendant privileges. This is a difficult process, especially hard for some conservati­ves who have long imagined race as solely the possession of “minorities”. As demographi­cs continue to shift (by 2042, non-white Americans will be in the majority), the reimaginin­g of whiteness is already becoming a turbulent new force in American culture and politics.

Kanishk Tharoor is the author of Swimmer Among the Stars: Stories The views expressed are personal

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors outside Bank of America Stadium before an NFL football game in Charlotte, North Carolina
GETTY IMAGES/AFP Demonstrat­ors outside Bank of America Stadium before an NFL football game in Charlotte, North Carolina
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India