Santa Cruz Sentinel

For this Black mom, Ralph Yarl could have been her son

- By Kia Breaux

On April 13, the nightmare that I'd worried about ever since we moved into our neighborho­od came true.

That was the day that I learned 16-year-old Ralph Yarl was shot after mistakenly ringing a doorbell at the wrong house while trying to pick up his younger brothers from a playdate. And even as I anguished over what happened to him, one thing kept echoing in my mind: It could have been my child.

John, my older son, is 17 and attends the same high school as Ralph. It's common for me to ask John to pick up his 14-year-old brother Jaden from various extracurri­cular activities. I've been cautious about what I ask John to do and where I ask him to go. I don't know what might happen if he crosses paths with someone who feels threatened by the color of his skin.

That's because the suburbs of Kansas City north of the Missouri River have long held a reputation of not being

the most welcoming to Black families. While I've adjusted to the awkward stares and subtle racism, I've always had a nagging fear that something bad could happen if my sons ventured too far from home without me.

I became painfully aware that John shared that fear shortly after Ahmaud Arbery was gunned down by white men while jogging through a Georgia neighborho­od in 2020. Like Arbery, John liked to jog through the neighborho­od. Now, however, he was asking me

to trail him in my car as he jogged through ours.

I felt like I'd failed as a mother. I had done everything I could to make him feel safe and protected, but he was afraid to run past the familiar, well-manicured lawns in the only neighborho­od he's ever known as home.

I knew there would be challenges when we moved in as one of the only Black families in the subdivisio­n in 2005. But I figured the benefits would outweigh the drawbacks. Besides, you can't run or hide from racism.

My ex-husband and I bought our home when John was just six weeks old — three years before Staley High School opened — because we wanted our children to receive a quality education. Our realtor touted plans for the state-of-theart high school campus as a selling point. We loved the layout of the home on a half acre of land, and the sprawling backyard was perfect for the Irish setter we had at the time.

Some neighbors welcomed us with housewarmi­ng gifts of flowers and baked goods. Later, we were told that one family sold their house shortly after we moved in because they didn't want to live near Black people. At a party at a neighbor's house not long after that, a guest wondered out loud why Black people would want to live in a predominan­tly white neighborho­od. “Wouldn't they feel more comfortabl­e living around their own people?”

Then there was the time I sent my then-husband to return a casserole dish a neighbor left at my house after a party. The former neighbor, whom we'd known for years at that point, opened the door and yelled, “We don't want any. Go Away,” and slammed the door. She didn't take the time to make out the face on the other side of the door. She just saw Black. She apologized profusely when she realized what she had done.

It touched John from very early on, too. He was in kindergart­en when I had to confront some of the realities of raising a Black child in this predominan­tly white suburb. Silly me. I thought I'd have more time to prepare.

We were home one evening when I overheard John yell at the TV during a game of Wii boxing. “Take that, you jigaboo!” He could tell by my face that the word was more than a casual insult aimed at his virtual opponent. It took a while for me to coax out of him that a white kid at school had called him that name.

How do you explain to a 5-year-old why someone would call him that? I fumbled through it just as I've learned to fumble through raising my Black sons in an environmen­t where their skin is considered by some to be a weapon.

These things happen. You block them out and you move on, but the subtle tension remains. No one wants to talk about it. Eventually you become numb. You avoid certain situations. It's like walking on eggshells to avoid a landmine.

It becomes exhausting to try to shield my sons from the ugliness I know exists. John is dating now. If he plans to ask a white girl out, I always ask: “Do her parents know you are Black? Are they OK with it?”

When I heard what happened to Ralph, I cried. I haven't slept well since, because it could have easily been John who was shot in the head after mistakenly going to NE 115th Street instead of NE 115th Terrace to pick up his brother.

Ralph's mistake was an innocent one. In my neighborho­od, address mix-ups happen all the time. Many houses are numbered identicall­y, and sometimes the only difference in a street address is “terrace” versus “street” or “northwest” versus “northeast.”

 ?? CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kia Breaux watches her sons John, 17, right, and Jaden, 14, play a game in front of their home in Kansas City, Mo., on Friday.
CHARLIE RIEDEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kia Breaux watches her sons John, 17, right, and Jaden, 14, play a game in front of their home in Kansas City, Mo., on Friday.

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