Orlando Sentinel

Healing racial divide in Central Florida starts now

- By Nicky Boothe Perry Deirdre’ Keller

In 2012, Trayvon Martin was killed less than 30 miles from the Florida A&M University College of Law. In 2013, Johnathan Ferrell, who had played football for FAMU, was killed in Charlotte, N.C., seeking help after a car crash. The protests sparked by the recent death of George Floyd are about issues that are very close to home for Central Florida. As the interim dean and incoming dean of the College of Law, we feel compelled to add our voices to the chorus calling for systemic change.

We are living in historic times. COVID-19 continues to devastate our communitie­s and reorder the economy. The recent deaths of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery, and Breonna Taylor have unleashed outrage resulting from hundreds of years of anti-blackness.

The sense of foreboding occasioned by the pandemic merged with painful reminders of the inequities in our country as technology provided the world frontrow seats to the horrors of living while black in America. We’re being forced to reckon, again, with racism woven into the very fabric of our country.

Police brutality, economic oppression, and inequity in the justice and healthcare systems have been weighing on us for years. The burden is heavy. It is suffocatin­g. Black people in America have long been struggling to breathe.

As Caribbean immigrants we recognize that while we are judged by the color of our skin, African-Americans bear the brunt of generation­s of racially-based trauma and deprivatio­n in this country.

As leaders in academia we inhabit a space of privilege. But, we are acutely aware that outside of our spheres of influence we are, simply, black women.

As mothers of black sons we are painfully aware that our cherished children are viewed as threatenin­g because of the color of their skin. Any of our boys could be Trayvon Martin or Ahmaud Arbery.

As leaders at an HBCU we are concerned about the well-being of all our students, but because 47% of the student body identify as black, we are intensely conscious of the fragility of black lives in this country. Our concern is not just about societal barriers our black students face, but for their safety. Any of our black students could so easily be Johnathan Ferrell or Breonna Taylor.

The killings of Johnathan Ferrell, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd are emblematic of the systemic failure in policing, while the unjustifie­d deaths of Ahmaud Arbery and Trayvon Martin illustrate the deep-rooted racist beliefs that have existed in this country since before its founding. Both the legal system and the moral compass of our country are in need of change.

As disturbing as the past few months have been, we have also witnessed the best of humanity. We protected the health of our neighbors by respecting “stay-athome” orders. Healthcare providers worked tirelessly to preserve the lives of those impacted by COVID-19 and essential workers throughout the country showed up so that we could all buy groceries, have our garbage removed, and send and receive mail. People protested in every single state across America; in cities and towns, people of all ages, races and ethnicitie­s joined in solidarity against harmful policing and for the cause of racial injustice.

These selfless acts give us hope. While racism has always been present in America, its existence needn’t be our country’s destiny. As Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “Change will not come if we wait for some other person or some other time.” The time for change is now.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? A man looks at signs put up on a police fence in Washington after days of protests over the death of George Floyd.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP A man looks at signs put up on a police fence in Washington after days of protests over the death of George Floyd.
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