Dayton Daily News

More Black people see guns as onlymeans of protection

- CharlesM. Blow Charles M. Blowwrites forThe NewYorkTim­es. Frank Bruni will return soon.

Growing up in rural northern Louisiana, everyone I knew, at least every household, seemed to have guns.

My hometown, Gibsland, a flyspeck of a place, was and is majority Black. Gun ownership was the norm in those parts, including in the Black community. It was not associated with danger but with safety. There were many older Black people in the South who could tell stories about a time when they were left to defend themselves against the threat of white terror, a father or an uncle or a brother sitting on a porch with a rifle through the night, should trouble come.

Indeed, one could argue that the right to bear arms in this country has never been so brazenly and openly abridged as it has against Black people. Many state codes prohibited Black gun ownership before the CivilWar and allowed for the disarmamen­t of Black people after. Many Black people saw these as attempts to prevent them from defending themselves against terror.Folks in my hometown, including single mothers like mine, also drove pieced-together, secondhand and thirdhand cars, sometimes at night, to larger, neighborin­g towns to shop for groceries or other needs. More often than one would like to believe, those cars broke down on a lonely stretch of pitch-black road, and people would have to walk to the nearest light, a friendly-seeming stranger’s home or a small roadside store, sometimes with children in tow, to look for help.

There was no roadside assistance on call, no cellphones and, in our town, there was only one police officer. Being armed was often the only way that people could feel safe.

Beyond safety, though, guns were and are seen as a tool in these agrarian regions: rifles used for hunting, to slaughter livestock or to keep vermin out of the garden and snakes out of the grass.

When I went away to college, my mother gave me a pistol, “just in case.” (Luckily, no such case presented itself.)

When I moved north, first to Detroit and then to New York, I moved into a mental space of more stringent gun control. In general, people weren’t hunting. There was law enforcemen­t everywhere. There were cellphones.

Armed crimes were rampant as well as shootings and gun-related homicides. There were mass shootings and drive-by shootings, all phenomena foreign to me. In my mind, city dwellers simply didn’t have the same need for weapons as the people in the rural community where I was raised, and many were also not reared with the respect for and knowledge of weapons we possessed.

I, like many, were convinced that fewer guns in the Black community would make it safer. But, for many Black people, that sentiment has turned. Since the gun-buying surge in the wake of the Obama presidency, the unrelentin­g series of unarmed

Black people being killed on video and the uncertaint­y brought on by the pandemic, gun sales to Black people are surging.

I, as much as anyone, would like to live in a society in which all citizens felt safe without the need of personal firearms. America could have created such a society. It chose not to.

Sure, there are still hunters and farmers and people in rural areas who use rifles as a tool. But, there are also people who buy and hoard guns because they have been fed a dystopian fantasy of a race war or a government takeover.

It seems to me that the surge in Black gun-buying is in large part simply a response to that. As has been the case since slavery, many Black people feel the need to defend themselves from their own country.

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