To Be Black And Angry
The Mayor Of New Orleans a black man has declared
that the city is back after a success Mardi Gras two
years after Katrina. However blacks are still struggling
to survive. The question now is should blacks be angry
about their situation? Read the commentary below and
then offer yours.
"WE HAD AN incredible Mardi Gras season," said C. Ray Nagin, the mayor of New Orleans, at a news conference Monday. In the city's second celebration since Hurricane Katrina, he said, hotels and restaurants were full and the parades were well attended. His message was clear: New Orleans is back.To me, however, his enthusiasm feels premature. Almost a year and a half after the flood left much of the city in a state of destitution that feels increasingly permanent, I wonder how much more of this we should take. By "we," I am referring to the national black body politic, and by "this," I mean the survival mentality of black New Orleanians, who have displayed an extraordinary but distressing forbearance.
Coping with tragedy that is often caused by racism is necessary, of course, and practically a way of life for African Americans. But this way of life needs to change. Black people need to stay on the offensive by staying mad when appropriate. And few moments in the last decade have been as appropriate as the aftermath of the catastrophic flood caused by broken levees in New Orleans.We had it right at first — the public indignation over being called citizen "refugees," the vocal disgust with lackadaisical and bureaucratic responses to Katrina by all levels of government, the unguarded Kanye West moment.
But the righteous anger was short-lived. The big discussion leading up to Mardi Gras was not about New Orleans' still-bleak and uncertain landscape but whether the hotels around the flood-spared French Quarter would be filled. The fact that they were seemed to settle the question about whether New Orleans was coming back. That whole neighborhoods much larger than the Quarter face a predicament far more grave than hotel occupancy rates seems to have escaped everyone's notice.Part of the problem is the breathless pace of news coverage and ever-shorter story cycles. But part is the unwillingness, or the inability, of blacks to keep the pressure up.
The reasons include a lack of leadership, a surplus of crises and fear of being cast as victims — or, worse yet, as angry black folk. America is leery of angry black folk. (The exception is when the anger is pre-approved or contained by performance, as in hip-hop or sports.) The impossible task for blacks these days is to get mad and get broader support, something that hasn't happened since the '60s. In 21st century America, empathy seems to be reserved for the heroic and the stoic, those who give all and ask for nothing.
Perseverance is what the nation seems to most admire in black folk, if it admires anything: the poetic but passive stuff celebrated in spirituals, blues songs and church hymns. In New Orleans, that has translated into admiration for the man who rescued his neighbor from a rooftop or for the family determined to return and rebuild, government help or no.
This Article Continues Here:
Get your copy of the award winning King:
"From Atlanta to the Mountain top.
"It's the 3-Hour Docudrama that
tells the story of the Civil Rights
movementand the life of its
Drum Major for Peace,
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
To learn moreand hear
excerpts from this treasured
program, click here:
http://www.kingprogram.net/
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home