Black Lives Matter… and it should not be courageous to say so

Early this morning, I found myself reading a highly commendable response, from the CEO of Starbucks to all of his US colleagues, to recent events in the United States, particularly around the murder of George Floyd. He used the word ‘courageous’ in describing the conversations that so many are having right now. That it takes courage to address racial prejudice in the twenty-first century is a damning, yet truthful, indictment on us all. That so many refuse to recognise that Black Lives Matter simply reinforces the treatment of black people in so many supposedly developed countries.

We shouldn’t be surprised

What I find equally unsurprising is the response of shock, globally, that this should happen. What I find disturbing is the assumption that this is a US problem. Yes, there may be many more incidents that we hear about in the United States, but this is global. Throughout the world, people are being oppressed because of the colour of their skin; throughout the world, opportunities are denied to people because of the colour of their skin. Throughout the world, indigenous and black people have lived with a history of slavery, colonisation and being left, when the land no longer served a purpose, to exist in poverty, with resources pillaged.

And believe me when I say that the UK is a glass house and has no right to throw stones at anyone. We may not be overtly racist as a country, but it is systemic and endemic. Where are black people in the boardroom? Where are black people in government? Where are black people in higher education? And where were black people when the rhetoric of the Brexit campaign of 2015 and 2016 was all about reclaiming sovereignty?

Change will require more than a blacked-out image but it is a start

Yes, Black lives matter

I’m increasingly bored of the response that ‘all lives matter’. Yes, I agree, all lives do matter but not all lives are subject to the prejudice that black lives are. By responding that all lives matter, it simply serves to dilute the message and downplay the impact of racism. The Black Lives Matter slogan is a pointed and necessary reference to the fact that black lives have simply not mattered enough.

And right now, it is Black Lives that matter more than any as the world awakes from its ignorance to the systemic oppression and racism that has never disappeared, that was not abolished with slavery and is not part of the American Dream.

If you want to know why Black Lives Matter, this is why.

This is a global issue

I’ve reflected long and hard in recent days about what is happening in the world around us. I am not of African descent but my ancestors were bought or born into slavery and I identify fiercely and proudly with my Caribbean heritage. Growing up around the great West Indian cricket team of the 70s & 80s, black pride has always been at the forefront of my life.

As I said above, we should be in disbelief, yet few of us are. Globally, political leaders still peddle division and hatred. Social justice so evidently is an irony which provides no justice. Opportunity exists for the few whilst the wider community is still stereotyped.

Racial profiling has created a narrative about our people and youth… and it’s not true. When we hear about knife crime, why do I always hear the assumption that it’s black youths? And why is nobody asking why they are so disenfranchised, why their communities are not being regenerated, why they are not having the opportunities to improve their lives? Are we asking why, in the 21st Century, opportunity is still the domain of the privileged?

Yes, some countries may be more subtle than others in racism, but it is omnipresent. We can argue about the road to change but we cannot deny the right of response to continued oppression.

I challenge you to reflect on what is right and what difference you can make because we all need to stand together.

I’m hurting and I’m angry. This week, I have drifted between tears and rage at injustice. BUT what I always remember is that I’m privileged and I absolutely must use that privilege to fight for the rights of those voices being ignored.

Finishing off

In his letter to colleagues, the Starbucks CEO (Kevin Johnson) refers to a quote from Doctor Martin Luther King.

A riot is the language of the unheard. What is it that America has failed to hear?

For too long, the world has listened but it has repeatedly failed to hear. If our leaders refuse to hear, then we must do it for them.

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