Mail & Guardian

White woman, reject racism

It’s about time that white women refuse to be beneficiar­ies of white supremacy

- Kiri Rupiah

The world is reeling from the events that took place in Charlottes­ville in the United States this past weekend. Violence at the Unite the Right rally, where marchers used Nazi slogans and the Sieg Heil salute, left three people dead, one the victim of a white supremacis­t, who drove a car into a crowd of counterpro­testers.

American politician­s have publicly condemned (by ineffectua­l handwringi­ng) the violence, using words like “repugnant”. President Donald Trump seemed unable to call the racist violence what it is, issuing instead a statement laying the blame for the carnage on racists and counterpro­testers alike. But many others in and outside the US government have recognised what happened as an act of domestic terrorism.

It wasn’t long before the colourblin­d cavalry of “good white people” showed up. With Lady Gaga in tow, most of them women, they heralded their arrival with calls for tolerance and love.

There have been many damp-squib takes on the events in Charlottes­ville and the US at large, but none more maddening than “good white people” exclaiming, “This is not America”, symbolised by the hashtag #ThisIsNotU­s.

#ThisIsNotU­s has since become the source of legitimate anger and pain. On Twitter and Facebook, it was quickly taken over by people of colour calling out the issues they have with the idea that white supremacis­t terrorism is unAmerican and thus “not us”. The hashtag allowed these “well-meaning” souls to be a “good white person”, condemning but not admitting to their privilege, or making sacrifices.

The white supremacis­ts in Charlottes­ville were angry about more than the removal of an antebellum statue. They are nostalgic for a long-gone US, in which white, male, Christian men’s lives are the only ones that matter.

Historical­ly, white women have been complicit in and benefited from white supremacy, even in popular culture, from the film Birth of a Nation (1915) to Get Out (2016).

Carolyn Bryant Donham, the white woman who, in 1955, accused 14-year-old Emmett Till of whistling at her, lied. Her falsehood led to Till being kidnapped, mutilated, fatally shot and his body discarded in a river. Vanity Fair recounted her story, describing her not as a liar but as an “attractive mother”.

In 1995, Susan Smith said a black man had hijacked her car with her sons in it. It later emerged Smith had drowned her sons because her lover didn’t want to be burdened with children. She drowned them by letting her car roll into a lake, while they sat strapped into their car seats.

Protecting the supposed purity and sanctity of white women led many black boys and men to their deaths around the world, from the US to the colonies.

The idea that black people are inherently mindless beasts committed to defiling white women fuelled lynching in the Jim Crow South, according to Lisa Lindquist-Dorr, a history professor at the University of Alabama. In her book, White Women, Rape, and the Power of Race in Virginia, 1900-1960, Lindquist-Dorr writes: “The myth insisted that black men were driven to assault white women, and that, as a deterrent, ‘black beast rapists’ should pay with their lives.”

White women weren’t just the justificat­ion but often champions of racial violence too. The suffragett­e movement is an example of how white women have prioritise­d racial solidarity.

Many suffragett­es, including Susan B Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Carrie Chapman Catt, advocated lynching and promoted voting rights as a way to strengthen white supremacy.

In November last year, white women came out in their numbers to vote for Trump, despite his welldocume­nted history as a bigot.

It’s time for white women to say emphatical­ly: “Not in my name!”

Not every white person is a white supremacis­t, but white supremacy benefits all white people, even those who don’t force black people into coffins or threaten to shoot them for talking back. That’s why it survives. To pretend otherwise is to be complicit in the systemic subjugatio­n of black and brown people.

White guilt is only useful in so far as it’s enlivening.

We don’t need more “good white people”. We need more people who act decisively, more people who disassocia­te themselves from racist peers and family members. We need more allies who are not colour-blind. We need people willing to introspect and self-evaluate the ways in which they support toxic masculinit­y in their partners and friends, or silence members of marginalis­ed groups — even when we don’t mean to, even when they mean well.

If this is too much to ask and your first instinct is to cuss me out or say, ‘But it wasn’t me!” maybe you ought to get a tiki torch and be honest.

 ??  ?? Not in our name: The Charlottes­ville violence has highlighte­d the need for white people to act decisively. Photo: Justin Ide/Reuters
Not in our name: The Charlottes­ville violence has highlighte­d the need for white people to act decisively. Photo: Justin Ide/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa