Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Considerin­g Milwaukee after Charlottes­ville

- MICHAEL SOIKA

My social network feed is breaking after last weekend’s incidents in Charlottes­ville, Va. So is my heart. Many have spoken out against the racism inherent in the alt-right march that sparked the violence, and rightfully so. Racism, hate, murder and violence cannot be tolerated. But the unfortunat­e fact is that all too often, it is tolerated now and has been tolerated in America’s past. Here is a sad litany of some of our racist actions as a people:

The colonial economy was built on slavery.

The westward expansion came at the genocidal expense of Native Americans.

The American apartheid of southern Blacks through the “Jim Crow” laws.

The internment of Japanese Americans during World War II.

The Federal Housing Administra­tion discrimina­tion against minority families while investing heavily in suburban subdivisio­ns for whites.

Racially motivated deed covenants in Milwaukee County restrictin­g black families from living in predominan­tly white communitie­s.

The resurgence of restrictiv­e voter registrati­on.

It seems easy to condemn the actions of our country in the past. It seems equally easy to sit at our computers and denounce the racist marchers in Virginia from our vantage point of living in the Midwest hundreds of miles from the “front lines.”

But, here in Milwaukee and in southeaste­rn Wisconsin, we are on the front lines of the battle against racism whether we acknowledg­e it or not. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel recently published a series of articles looking at the similariti­es between the conditions leading to the open housing marches in 1967 and those that sparked the unrest in Sherman Park in 2016, nearly 50 years later. Unfortunat­ely, not much has changed, and in many instances, things have gotten worse. Poverty has deepened, incarcerat­ion rates have increased, unemployme­nt of black males is in the double digits and the gaps in education between minority students and white students persist.

I have a challenge to all people of good will who want to stand up in opposition to what has transpired in Charlottes­ville: Spend your time and energy working to alleviate the structural racism in southeaste­rn Wisconsin instead. The racism here is much more insidious. We don’t have the easily identifiab­le evil of Nazis and white supremacis­ts marching in the streets. What we do have is institutio­nal racism hidden behind the doors of civility

and carried out in long-standing public policies. We have 72% of all poor people in the four-county region packed into the city of Milwaukee, with little support or affordable housing elsewhere. We have cynical politician­s opposing mass transit in the suburbs and suppressin­g voter registrati­on in predominan­tly minority communitie­s.

Segregatio­n is an evil that must be confronted by all people of faith and good will. We are willing to do so when the evil is far away — in Charlottes­ville. But it takes a special kind of strength and courage to confront the segregatio­n in our own back yard.

When we search our hearts, perhaps we will understand that inaction on home-grown segregatio­n is tacitly condoning it.

 ?? MYKAL MCELDOWNEY, VIA USA TODAY NETWORK ?? White nationalis­t groups march with torches through the University of Virginia campus in Charlottes­ville on Aug. 11. When met by counter protesters, some yelling “Black lives matter,” tempers turned into violence.
MYKAL MCELDOWNEY, VIA USA TODAY NETWORK White nationalis­t groups march with torches through the University of Virginia campus in Charlottes­ville on Aug. 11. When met by counter protesters, some yelling “Black lives matter,” tempers turned into violence.

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