Posts tagged race.

Recent Fictions In The History of Race: My Rebuttal To Samuel Kasumu

      

‘A group of Caribbean’s arriv[ing] unannounced on a boat’ is how Samuel Kasumu, social entrepreneur and political commentator, summarises the Black presence in Britain and the beginning of the immigration debate in the UK. In a poorly written article series titled ‘The Origins of Race Policy‘ Kasumu presents a counterfeit history showing no evidence of research above the level of hearsay. His work is careless, dubious and makes a mockery of the legacy of race relations in this country.


After a rather arbitrary breakdown of the demography of the UK in series one Kasumu turns his attention to the ‘so called Empire Windrush’. In his derision and emphasis that this was ‘an event that happened on one day’ he fails to show any critical awareness of this being the beginning of post war mass migration.


Kasumu distastefully plays to the stereotype of Britain being swamped by ‘Blacks on a boat’, crediting the then Prime Minister Clement Attlee with having called it an invasion. If he had any comprehension at all of the history of the The Windrush he would not imagine that Caribbean’s apprehended this boat from their resting place on a beach, with an impromptu decision to sail to Britain. He would know that the ship was the property of British armed forces, transporting Caribbean ex-servicemen and other skilled workers (granted British citizenship in the 1948 Nationality Act), who had responded to the invitations for work in the post war reconstruction period – effectively an act of recruitment. It was hardly unannounced.


What Kasumu has presented as a reflection on race policy is a short sighted caricature of Black British history which is subject to the trappings of uncritical race relations work: where is the close analysis of Britain’s Caucasian population? Or is this another project on the Black and ethnic minority ‘others’? It was an easy mistake to make considering he erased the eighteenth century when he suggested ‘there was no appetite to publicly differentiate any racial groups’ prior to 1945. He clearly has no knowledge of European history, specifically the Enlightenment Period where we find some of the earliest ideas on race. It was at this time that Arthur De Gobineau began to differentiate between ‘races’ and is credited with modern day racial demography. He developed the theory of the Aryan master race and often referred to ‘negroes’ as the lowest race in the world. I presented a condensed explanation of the conceptual development of race for Ceasefire Magazine which Kasumu is most welcome to read. There is of course Social Darwinism, eugenics, The French Revolution 1789 all of which are critical to an understanding of the history of race. I would recommend Kenan Malik’s The Meaning of Race to any beginner in its historical and political roots.


How could Kasumu attempt to write a history of race policy without understanding the development of the theory of race and its contingent relationship with slavery and colonialism under the British empire? It makes him unqualified – and quite frankly unable – to interpret the relationship between Britain and its colonies as the determinant for present day cross racial interactions. 

After the dismissal of two centuries of history Kasumu drafts a chronology of race policy which is a complete train wreck of ideas:


No, it is not adequate to cite Enoch Powell’s ‘River of Blood’ speech in 1968 as the reason for Conservative election victory in 1970 because it preceded that vote. It is a simple principle in the discipline of history that sequence does not resolve cause.

No, the 1971 Immigration Act was not ‘the first time there was officially policy designed to limit immigration’. There was the Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962, and a second in 1968; both of which are recognised by scholars as laws devised principally to prevent non-white immigration into Britain.

No, the 1940s and 50s did not see an influx of ‘wealthy, highly educated Asian’s, who would go on to own many small businesses and take on highly respectable professions’. Stereotype much? South Asian immigration to Britain during this period was primarily by manual workers who – like their Caribbean counterparts – did the jobs white workers did not want: the unskilled jobs with poor conditions, low wages and unsociable hours, sharing decrepit living conditions. I suggest Peter Fryer’s Staying Power for a comprehensive history of Black people in Britain.


No, Samuel Kasumu cannot write such a ghastly piece of propaganda and expect to retain credibility. It is true, race policy [is] quite complex’ and there are resources available to help us make sense of it, but Kasumu’s article is not one of them. If indeed part three of his series will assess the legacy of the Stephen Lawrence case then may this come as a severe caution against any further presumptuous, cavalier or disreputable work he is planning.

Nichole Black.

#MYTRAMEXPERIENCE – “YOU ARE DOING RACISM WRONG”

“You are doing racism wrong” – I think this has been the overwhelming British response to #MyTramExperience which was uploaded to Youtube this week. We denounced this woman emphatically; Croydon MP Gavin Barwell told The Voice “Frankly it is people like this woman that the country would be better off without” and journalist Piers Morgan tweeted that the woman should be deported, (what is with this archaic British territorialism?) The reality is the protesting was far more concerned about maintaining the British culture of – well, lets call it diplomacy shall we – than an allegiance to anti-racism.

Emma West was arrested. Order was restored. And we have congratulated ourselves on how civilised we are about these things. Might I remind you it is only just over forty years sinceConservative MP Enoch Powell, (a member of the gang governing us now), gave his ‘River of Blood’ speech, in which he addressed the nation with the exact same message as the Croydon perpetrator above. The same year as the 1968 Immigration Act which essentially made this racism a part of government policy. Racism plays a more prominent role in our society than many of us our willing to accept.

The relentless commitment to the personification of racism – that is, conceptualising racism as a single person/action – makes it almost impossible to recognise the complex ways it informs our social reality. We – or you really – are apathetic about race/ism in this country. ‘My Tram Experience’ was trending worldwide. However when there were successive revelations of fraudulence and belligerence in the Mark Duggan case – the man whose murder was the catalyst of rioting across the country this summer – metropolitan police corruption was not trending.

I have not witnessed the same level of national outrage at the unjustifiable deaths of Black men in police custody; or that over the last six years in Haringey, for the 10300 job seekers there have been 352 vacancies1. People lets get serious. I am not impressed that we arrested a woman with visibly poor mental health for her racist ranting. This is all a part of state performance. Emma West was not doing racism right. Our government agencies have shown us there are more efficient and quite frankly less noisy ways of denigrating Black and Ethnic Minority citizens in Britain. Underemployment, housing overcrowding and incarceration have all been working fine so far. Perhaps we would turn our attention to these areas if we were not so caught up in racism through drama.

1. May 16 2011 – A Trade Union Congress analysis

Nichole Black

Black and Killing it, Prep School Style.

I go back to school this week. MA Race and Resistance at The University of Leeds. I’ve outgrown the demon of double consciousness trying to threaten the Black out of me. Check this module description:

This module focuses on ‘race’, identity and culture in the Black Atlantic diaspora centring on the Black body in slavery, colonialism, independence and de-colonial thought as a site of political, aesthetic and philosophical contestation. It focuses on the contribution by intellectuals and political activists to this debate in the Caribbean (Fanon’s colonial psyche and Cesaire’s negritude, Rastafarianism and Garvey’s Back to Africa Movement, post- modern Blackness, Caribbean feminisms), Brazil (Candomblé, Afro- aesthetics, blocos afro), USA (Black Nationalism, Black Power, Black feminism) and the UK (the making of Black as a political colour, hyphenated identities, hybridity, African and Asian descent feminism). These specific sites have been chosen not only because of their centrality in Black Atlantic diasporic philosophical thought and cultural production but also because they demonstrate how such thought and cultural production have been included or excluded in how nations imagine themselves: Jamaica as ‘Black de-colonializing’ state, Brazil as ‘a racial democracy’, the USA as ‘post-race’’and the UK as ‘tolerant multi-cultural’.

Jealous much?  

NN

The People You Meet When You Write About Race

             

Mr. History

    “Black people were enslaved like a million years ago. They’ve had enough time to get their act together, but they’re still whining about their problems. I don’t want to hear about transgenerational wealth gaps and discriminatory hiring practices! Their problem is that they’re lazy! Case closed!”

Ms. Kumbayah

    “We need to recognize that everyone is just the exact same on the inside. Why do we bother using labels like “black” and “white” anyway? Even though the way society treats people falls along racial lines to the detriment of some and benefit of others, we should ignore that! Aren’t we all just members of the human race?”

Mr. Hear No Evil

    “It’s people like you that are the real racists! Most people don’t think twice about someone else’s race! Talking about race is what makes racism happen, not entrenched ideas that won’t change unless they’re discussed!”

Ms. Myopia

    “I’m a black person, and I haven’t ever felt mistreated because of it. Therefore, nobody else has any business complaining about racism – I’m living proof that it doesn’t exist!”

 

Mr. Funk & Wagnalls

    “Here is the dictionary definition of racism. You can see right here that it describes only one small subset of behaviour. You have no business advocating that the definition of a word change to fit a changed environment of racist behaviour, even if it still describes the old racism. You must adhere to this one definition always!”

Ms. Minimizer

    “Sure, racism used to be a big problem, but there’s lots of black people in prominent positions these days. Can’t we stop talking about racism like it’s still a big issue? The President is black, and clearly nobody has any problem with that! Don’t we have more important things to talk about?”

Mr. Liberal White Guilt

    “White people are the worst! You’re absolutely right. I am a white person, and I just feel so awful every time I hear about what my people are doing to yours. We need to start fixing the problems in the black community. After all, that’s what we do – go into other communities and solve their problems!”

Ms. Black Mythology Kook

    “White people are the worst! You’re absolutely right. I am sick and tired of watching the white man destroy us. It’s time to rise up and take to the streets. Until we show them that the black man is the original man, and that white people are an ancient genetic experiment to create a human being without a soul, we’ll never achieve true freedom.”

Mr. Bootstraps

    “I’m so sick and tired of people talking about ‘white privilege’. My father was an immigrant from Switzerland, and he had to struggle just like everyone else to make money. His life was tough – you call that privilege? I didn’t get a handout from anyone, and neither should anyone else!”

Ms. Interpretation

    “Affirmative action? Isn’t that just where white people aren’t allowed to have jobs because they’re all saved for less-qualified minorities? That’s just slavery but in the other direction – reverse slavery! My cousin knows a guy whose brother didn’t get into his first-choice college, possibly because of affirmative action – racism against white people is the biggest problem nowadays!”

Mr. Conspiracy

    “Of course you’d say that – the NAACP has been pushing that lie since they were formed! This whole ‘anti-racism’ thing is just a way of taking white people’s hard-earned money and putting it into welfare programs and health care. It’s how black people are planning on getting reparations!”

Ms. Extraterrestrial

    “You monkeys are just mad that you’re genetically inferior to our master race! Once our society, which was created by white people, shakes off this liberal brainwashing, we’ll finally be able to send you animals back to where you came from. Get over it – white people are just superior!”

But I would be remiss and completely unfair if I didn’t mention…

Mr./Ms. Has Been Listening

    “This topic made me really uncomfortable when I first started talking about it, but I’m glad I did. I’m not sure if I ‘get’ everything, but my thinking has definitely changed. Here are some reasonable objections and questions that I have, and I hope we can talk about them without offending each other.”

I am really happy to report that while I have personally met all of the above people, Has Been Listening is by far my most common interaction. All of the above are conversations I relish having, and it is my fervent hope that I am slowly equipping you to navigate those waters as well as I could. As I’ve said all along, the more talking we do, the more we learn.

Reblogged from www.racialicious.com

#race