Los Angeles Times

GLAD TO BE HERE

I SPENT MY 40TH BIRTHDAY FOCUSED ON THOSE WHO DIDN’T LIVE TO SEE THAT AGE BECAUSE THEY WERE BLACK IN AMERICA. BY MARQUES HARPER

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WHEN I TURNED 40, Ididn’ttakeavict­ory lap to celebrate my successes in L.A. after a bumpy landing during my early years in the City of Angels. I didn’t focus on the wonderful memories I had or the deep sadness and melancholy that are simply a part of life, especially if you live and love long enough to reach middle age. ¶ There was no big party with my closest friends. There were no escapades in France, Italy or Greece, no dancing and drinking into the night. My co-workers threw a surprise party for me at the old Times building in downtown L.A., and I had a getaway to Palm Springs for some needed me time, with Beyoncé playing in my earbuds, as I relaxed poolside. ¶ I’m all about #BlackBoyJo­y, but what I actually celebrated when I turned 40 was that I hadn’t been a victim of a shooting or violence by the police. ¶ Leading up to my milestone birthday almost three years ago, I thought about the people, especially other black men, who had never lived to see 40 because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time, or the right place at the wrong time — no matter the circumstan­ces.

I got to see another day. Some of my friends, especially my white friends, seemed surprised or confused about why I would celebrate my 40th with these thoughts. That’s just the reality of being a black man in America, even one who grew up in the middle-class suburbs of New Jersey, often the only black kid in my classes in grade school during the 1980s.

Also, I was more fortunate than some of my younger cousins who are always in trouble with the law.

For the last 18 years of my career, I have spent time with celebritie­s, artists, stylists, writers and designers and traveled the world, sitting in the front row at fashion shows and, as was the case in February, being within an arm’s reach of the world’s richest man, Jeff Bezos, at the Tom Ford fashion show in Hollywood.

That’s just part of my life, but I’ve seen enough movies and cop shows, read my share of news stories and lived enough to know that mistakes can happen in minutes. One minute you’re charged with a crime you didn’t commit, and 30 or 40 years later, you’re exonerated. I always follow those stories.

Just last year I was a near wreck when my parents told me about an incident involving my dad and the police. Around that time, my 72-year-old father, a veteran of the Korean War, had achieved a personal milestone. He and another veteran had spent five years working on getting a bill through Congress and signed into law by the president. (The new law, which went into effect in January, expands the benefits of those who served at the Korean DMZ and suffered herbicide exposure in the late 1960s and early ’70s.)

His victory didn’t matter that warm day that he ended up in the right place at the wrong time. Or maybe it was the wrong place at the wrong time.

The police were looking for a blue Dodge van.

That day my dad was driving my parents’ blue van through Willingbor­o, N.J., a township of 32,000 residents. (It’s a town where black people were once denied the right to buy homes, and now it’s the county epicenter for COVID-19.) Dad was on his way to pick up my mom from the hairdresse­r.

As he was driving along, two police SUVs came up from behind and signaled him to pull over. He did. The officer had his hand on his gun as he approached the van. There were four patrol vehicles on the scene. My father kept his hands on the steering wheel. Then the officer noticed my dad’s veterans cap and said, “Oh, my God, we have the wrong man . ... We almost made a mistake.”

Oh, mistakes. That’s why we’re taught early: Keep your hands on the steering wheel so the police can see them. Don’t make any sudden moves. Don’t end up in a situation in which you’re gasping for air and saying, in your final moments, “I can’t breathe.”

When I hung up the phone that day after talking with my parents, I teared up. I’ve seen it all as a journalist. My dad was lucky. Based on the countless stories reported — and particular­ly those of late — not all black men and women are.

The police could have easily made another mistake that day.

NOW, IN THE turmoil and powder-keg tension of 2020, which seems like a version of the 1968 assassinat­ions and social unrest I learned about as a child, I’m riveted by the stories and video of George Floyd, who died in police custody May 25 in Minneapoli­s. And the May 25 incident in New York’s Central Park, captured on video, in which a white woman called the police on Christian Cooper, a black birdwatche­r, after he asked her to leash her dog.

Then there’s Ahmaud Arbery, the 25-year-old black jogger who was fatally shot during a Feb. 23 incident involving three white men near Brunswick, Ga.; 26year-old Breonna Taylor, a black woman killed by police in her Louisville, Ky., home March 13; and Tony McDade, a 38-yearold black trans man who was shot and killed by police on May 27 in Tallahasse­e, Fla.

As we emerge from our COVID-19 isolation, I find these latest shootings and racial incidents in the news to be painful and heartbreak­ing. We’ve messed up with race and diversity matters for centuries, even before a slave ship arrived in 1619 at Point Comfort in the colony of Virginia.

During my sheltering at home, I’ve thought about my paternal great-great-grandmothe­r, a slave from North Carolina. My living family members who met her said she was feisty and mean, and you know what? I would be too if I was someone’s property.

Now if 2020 is a time when the ghosts of past Americas have turned up, as described last month in an Associated Press story, I wonder if my greatgreat-grandmothe­r’s America is that much different from mine today when it comes to diversity, financial inequality and police brutality.

During these strange pandemic times, I haven’t been sleeping well, and when I scrolled through Instagram in bed earlier this week, a post from the black-owned New York fashion brand Cushnie caught my eye. It read, “I wish America loved black people the way they love black culture.”

I understand this sentiment from the work I do. Black culture is constantly influencin­g global fashion, but take a closer look at who runs the major fashion labels and who their creative directors are.

With so many brands in love with black culture and so many posting #BlackoutTu­esday messages on Instagram this week, why are we fashion journalist­s still writing about the need for racial diversity on runways? It’s a conversati­on that has been going on for far too long.

And it’s a part of the larger dialogue I see unfolding in protests and on social media. I’ll be curious to know the effects of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, which have been a daily presence lately here in L.A., as police and news helicopter­s circle in the skies and with COVID-19, the silent killer, raging on and taking, in abundance, the lives of black and brown people.

I’m wondering if that change that Sam Cooke sang about decades ago will ever actually come. I have uneasy feelings about our “new normal,” and that’s on top of being upset about attacks on fellow journalist­s covering these protests. I’ll see how I sleep tonight. Or maybe I’ll be awake, wondering if I’ll always have anxiety when I’m doing nothing wrong and a police cruiser pulls up next to me wherever I’m driving in the city.

Like my father, who these days has been sheltering at home with CNN and the sounds of Marvin Gaye, will I one day end up in the right place at the wrong time?

 ?? Micah Fluellen Los Angeles Times ?? Illustrati­on for Marques Harper’s essay in the June 6, 2020 Saturday section.
Micah Fluellen Los Angeles Times Illustrati­on for Marques Harper’s essay in the June 6, 2020 Saturday section.

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