Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Book looks at what it means to be white in America

- Jeff Rowe

The African American man whose beating by Los Angeles police ignited civil upheaval in 1992 famously said later: “Can’t we all just get along?”

The answer to Rodney King’s question, which has taken on renewed importance these past months: Not yet. And as readers learn in “Just Us: An American Conversati­on” (Graywolf) by Yale University professor Claudia Rankine — a mix of essays, narratives, poems and pictures — we have wide bridges of understand­ing to build.

Rankine has emerged as one of America’s foremost scholars on racial justice. Among other places, Rankine is quoted in Layla Saad’s “me and white supremacy,” published earlier this year and now a New York Times bestseller.

How we will solve our racial conundrum emerges in both books as more complicate­d than Rodney King envisioned. Saad presents a multiple-step plan for acknowledg­ing and treating racism; Rankine offers compelling stories that illuminate, often through conversati­ons with white people, how they have benefited from their skin tone.

Some of these talks are emotionall­y painful. A seatmate on a flight later wrote to Rankine that while he told her on the trip that he “didn’t notice much tension between the Black kids and the white kids in our town,” that it was “not that I didn’t notice it so much as I wanted to forget it.”

Justice ignored, though, is justice denied and never forgotten. This seems certain: We delay our day of racial reckoning at our national peril. Recently, the New York Times reported that President Trump canceled racial sensitivit­y training for the federal government, calling it “anti-American propaganda.”

Rankine sees it differently. “The more you know, the more possible it is for us to exist in the same reality,” she said.

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Claudia Rankine

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