The Palm Beach Post

Movie exposes resentment­s between U.S., African blacks

- By Patrice Onwuka Patrice Lee Onwuka is a senior policy analyst at the Independen­t Women’s Forum. Onwuka is a U.S. citizen originally from Montserrat and is married to an African immigrant from Nigeria. She wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

“Black Panther” is a great movie, but not stellar.

I appreciate­d the action scenes, the smart and strong female characters who keep their clothes on, the healthy interactio­ns between men and women based on respect, and the main character who is not just a good guy but a good man. The fictional country of Wakanda paints a vision of Africa that is stunningly beautiful, economical­ly vibrant and far more technologi­cally advanced than even Western countries.

Yet, for all of the “Wakanda Forever” memes and Instagram photos that the movie has inspired, there were some troubling things.

It’s preachy and exposes some uncomforta­ble tensions between blacks in Africa and America.

Black Americans — those whose ancestors were enslaved in the United States — harbor anti-African immigrant sentiments. They may love the bright prints of African clothing and the idea of African wealth, but there is some deep-seated resentment about immigrants from black countries that spilled out on the screen in “Black Panther.”

The antagonist of the film, Erik Stevens (later renamed Killmonger), is the son of two worlds: Wakanda and America. Though his father was from Wakanda, he grew up in South-Central Los Angeles during the 1990s, so we can assume that the poverty and violence of his environmen­t shaped him.

Stevens’ goal of finding Wakanda was about more than finding his roots but a chance to scold the people of Wakanda for abandoning him and blacks in America to slavery and injustice. He says, “Two billion people all over the world who look like us whose lives are much harder, and Wakanda has the tools to liberate them all. Where was Wakanda?”

The movie goes back to the point when T’Challa, the king of Wakanda and the Black Panther, confronts his father and the kings of his past in a vision for their isolationi­sm from the rest of the world. We are also hit over the head with the message that Wakanda is for Wakandans, not outsiders like Killmonger.

In light of “Black Panther,” some black Americans are asking whether they would even be welcome in the fictitious Wakanda. The real question is whether black immigrants are welcome in the United States by black Americans. The answer to both questions is likely the same.

Black immigrants from Africa and the Caribbean who migrated to America in the 1960s recount the racial slurs and harsh treatment they faced from native-born blacks. Before the 1988 movie “Coming to America,” Eddie Murphy’s joke about Africans “riding around butt naked on a zebra” informed the views of many blacks about Africans being primitive. Decades later, second-generation Nigerians still talk about black American kids calling them “African bootyscrat­chers” and making fun of their dark skin tones, their smells or the proper English they spoke.

Black immigrants from the Caribbean didn’t escape either. We, too, were teased for how we spoke — even if it was British English. Television shows such as “In Living Color” in the 1990s painted us as judgmental, unsympathe­tic and obsessed with working multiple jobs simultaneo­usly.

Sharing the same skin color did not lead to shared appreciati­on and friendship­s between the ethnic groups. Time has not healed those wounds.

Black Americans still view all immigrants skepticall­y, with 68 percent in one poll saying that immigratio­n is too high. They believe that immigrants erode their employment opportunit­ies. Because black Americans tend to be concentrat­ed in lowwage, low-skilled positions they compete for those jobs with legal immigrants and those here illegally. Over 8 out of 10 black Americans think there are more than enough Americans to fill unskilled jobs.

Young black Americans also harbor resentment against the academic success of black immigrants in top American colleges.

Foreign-born blacks are more likely than U.S.-born blacks to hold a bachelor’s degree. They make up 41 percent of the black population of Ivy League schools.

“Black Panther’s” message of a Pan-African unity against injustice is a nice sentiment. However, those preaching it should practice it.

 ??  ?? Onwuka
Onwuka

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States