Dayton Daily News

Black Brits know why Meghan Markle wants out

- By Afua Hirsch This first appeared in the New York Times.

The British press has succeeded in its apparent project of hounding Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, out of Britain. The part it perhaps didn’t bargain for, however, is the loss of Prince Harry — a much loved royal and a key part of the family’s global brand — along with her.

In a statement, the couple said they wanted to “carve out a progressiv­e new role” within the royal family and would “step back as ‘senior’ members, and work to become financiall­y independen­t.”

The British press reacted with surprise at the “shock move abroad,” described variously as “seismic,” “selfish,” “rogue” and “an atrocious lapse of judgment.”

If the media paid more attention to Britain’s communitie­s of color, perhaps it would find the announceme­nt far less surprising. With a new prime minister whose track record includes overtly racist statements, some of which would make even Donald Trump blush, a Brexit project linked to native nationalis­m and a desire to rid Britain of large numbers of immigrants, and an ever thickening loom of imperial nostalgia, many of us are also thinking about moving.

From the very first headline about her being “(almost) straight outta Compton” and having “exotic” DNA, the racist treatment of Meghan has been impossible to ignore.

Those who claim frequent attacks against the duchess have nothing to do with her race have a hard time explaining these attempts to link her with particular­ly racialized forms of crime — terrorism and gang activity

— as well as the fact that she has been most venomously attacked for acts that attracted praise when other royals did them.

Her treatment has proved what many of us have always known: No matter how beautiful you are, whom you marry, what palaces you occupy, charities you support, how faithful you are, how much money you accumulate or what good deeds you perform, in this society racism will still follow you.

In Britain’s rigid class society, there is still a deep correlatio­n between privilege and race. The relatively few people of color — and even fewer if you count only those who have African heritage — who rise to prominence and prosperity in Britain are often told we should be “grateful” or told to leave if we don’t like it here.

The legacy of Britain’s history of empire — a global construct based on a doctrine of white supremacy — its pioneering role in the slave trade and ideologies of racism that enabled it, and policies of recruiting people from the Caribbean and Africa for lowpaid work and then discrimina­ting against them in education and housing, is with us today: The scandal surroundin­g the wrongful deportatio­n of black British people in recent years is still reverberat­ing.

Meghan’s decision to join the family that is the symbolic heart of the establishm­ent responsibl­e for this troubled history was perplexing to many black British people, as we wondered whether she fully appreciate­d the institutio­n she had entered.

Both she and Harry appear to have gained crystal clear vision as to their reality. It’s no wonder the couple want to leave and — as the coded statement that they want to raise their son, Archie, “with the space to focus on the next chapter” seems to suggest — protect him from the bile to which they’ve been exposed.

And ironically, by taking matters into their own hands, Harry and Meghan’s act of leaving — two fingers up at the racism of the British establishm­ent — might be the most meaningful act of royal leadership I’m ever likely to see.

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