Happy Monday and happy Black History Month!
Today’s Opinion section explores the idea of becoming “reparations people” and was inspired by Dr. Rev Jacqui Lewis’ sermon yesterday titled “Living as Reparations People.”
Rev. Lewis is the first Black woman to serve as a senior minister for the Collegiate Church —the oldest continuous Protestant Church in North America. Building off Rev. Lewis, I present an offering for how we might become reparations people.
I also added a new section titled “Anti-History Movement” to capture the enormous efforts being taken by state legislatures to limit what can be taught in schools. We should be alarmed.
With radical love,
Trevor
News Recommendations
San Fransisco’s Reparations Advisory Committee recommended a one-time payment of $5 million.
Ron DeSantis continues to erase Black history from schools. But teachers can still say the word “reparations.”
Your yearly reminder of why we celebrate Black History Month in February.
Conservatives are absolutely losing it over a recent Proud Family episode that discussed reparations.
The FBI, unsurprisingly, tried to infiltrate racial justice protests in 2020.
Hulu teamed up with Nikole Hannah-Jones to turn the 1619 project into a documentary and Erika Alexander’s (interviewed in edition 61) ‘The Big Payback,’ released on PBS.
Biden calls for the same old solutions to address police brutality.
Racial wealth inequality is declining — but it’s still no reason to celebrate.
Opinion
Becoming Reparations People
“One of the gravest obstacles to the achievement of liberation is that oppressive reality absorbs those within it and thereby acts to submerge human beings consciousness.”
Growing up, you could safely bet that you would find my family in church on Sunday mornings. It is a ritual that, much to my mother’s chagrin, has not carried over into my adulthood. Since my early teenage years, I’ve harbored deep ideological questions regarding the contradictions I believe exist within Christianity and the people who claim to practice it.
Though when I moved back to New York in 2018, I stumbled into an unassuming church situated on second avenue on the corner of east 7th street called Middle Collegiate Church and was immediately struck by the type of rhetoric that echoed within its halls — the conversations I had always yearned for in church.
Led by Reverend Jacqui Lewis, Middle Church is unapologetically bold in its stances on racial, gender, and social justice. By my second service, Rev. Lewis had touched on trans issues, reparations, and Indigenous land theft.
Middle Church, a self-described “multi-cultural, multi-ethnic, intergenerational movement,” doesn’t stand where it once stood for over 128 years. In 2020, the church was destroyed in a six-alarm fire that gutted the entire building.
(Picture Credit: Michelle V. Agins/The New York Times)
The fire hasn’t stopped Middle Church from tackling serious and intricate social issues. Yesterday, Rev. Lewis delivered a sermon titled “Living as Reparations People,” in which she advised each of us to repair what is broken inside ourselves and between each other in order to create the public will necessary for complete transformation.
This notion of “reparations people,” which Rev. Lewis introduced in her sermon yesterday, speaks to a common theme I’ve noticed in my conversations about reparations — the urge to apply the principles of reparation to the individual.
In Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed, he argues that “one of the gravest obstacles to the achievement of liberation is that the oppressive reality absorbs those within it and thereby acts to submerge human beings’ consciousness.”
Those of us concerned with the advancement of liberation understand that societal transformation must coincide with individual transformation. At the interpersonal level, our relationships have obvious fractures, particularly across racial groups.
Rev. Lewis likens these fractures to a broken heart — the organ we’ve constructed to sit at the center of our emotions. Black people, on this land and across the globe, suffer from broken hearts — the result of centuries worth of violence and discrimination based on the color of our skin.
Though we may not inherently recognize it, every time we engage with someone of another race, we experience a range of emotions — what sociologist Tristan Green has called “racial emotions.” Though, as sociologist Eduardo Bonilla-Silva points out, this definition does not capture the fact that racial emotions can also be experienced when “looking at a picture, reading a newspaper, watching a movie, or walking into — or even thinking about a location.” Whiteness does not operate in isolation, according to Bonilla-Silva. In fact, it is predicated on othering, as it requires a binary racial construction where the “other is viewed as the opposite” These racialized thoughts and feelings produce antiblackness—a shared social emotion that binds our culture together.
How can we cultivate a generation of people who are not only concerned with repairing racial fractures at the individual level but are committed to rooting out anti-Blackness at the societal level?
Becoming reparations people, or as we say at Liberation Ventures, “building a culture of repair,” must be understood as a multigenerational challenge. Reparations, therefore, can not be understood as a period but as a comma. Meaning that the project of reparations should not be considered finished until the current values that undergird our worldviews are completely transformed.
Only when we’ve let go of individualism, greed, and competition as societal values and embrace collectivism, altruism, and community might we consider the project of reparations nearing an endpoint.
The act of letting something go is almost always accompanied by grief — which Malkia Devich-Cyril argues we need in our social movements. Grief, they note, is “an evolutionary indicator of love — the kind of great love that guides revolutionaries.”
Healing the broken hearts of Black people and, by proxy, the entire nation will take a collective understanding that we are leaving behind this world of inequality and the continuous exploration of the following questions:
What “racial emotions” do you experience when you think about Black people about Blackness? What practices might lead to emotional and behavioral shifts?
What are the ways in which anti-Blackness shows up as a structure? How does it shape our perception? How does it continue to be perpetuated through narrative? How can we deconstruct these narratives?
On the other side of these questions lies a liberated future where we’ve expanded our collective consciousness, healed our hearts, and embraced becoming reparations people.
National News
NPR: The College Board slams Florida for what it calls 'slander' of AP Black history course
Forbes: Racial Wealth Inequality Gradually Declines, But That Is No Reason To Celebrate
New York Times: Amid Criticism, Elite Crime Teams Dwindled. Then Cities Brought Them Back.
New York Times: The College Board Strips Down Its A.P. Curriculum for African American Studies
New York Times: War Is Peace, Freedom Is Slavery, Democrats Are Radicals
CNBC: The barriers Black families face in building generational wealth
The Atlantic: Not Every Atrocity Is About White Supremacy (not an endorsement)
The Intercept: Tema Okun On Her Mythical Paper on White Supremacy
The Intercept: How the FBI Infiltrated Racial Justice Protests in 2020
New York Times: A Milestone for Black N.F.L. Hires, but Not on the Sidelines
New York Times: 8 Places Across the U.S. That Illuminate Black History
Marketplace: Redlined: David Brancaccio’s thoughts on “The Big Payback”
Essence: How The "Big Payback" Brings Renewed Focused To The Fight For Reparations
VC Star: A cautionary note for California's Reparations Task Force
Neiman Lab: Can journalism’s “reckoning” with racism progress to accountability — and redress?
Center for American Progress: The Killing of Tyre Nichols Must Serve as a Catalyst to Root Out Racial Injustice in Policing
Regional News
Miami Herald: State education official says teachers can use the word ‘reparations’ but won’t say
NBC News: Boston mayor names Reparations Task Force
Yahoo News: Boston appoints members to its new Reparations Task Force
ABC News: California reparations efforts eyeing $5 million payments, restitution
The Hill: California’s reparations proposals may carry a steep price for Democrats
Boston Globe: Time has not run out on the case for racial reparations
WSB-TV: $250,000 in funding approved for Fulton County Reparations Task Force
MPR: Documentary series traces history of racial injustice, resistance in Twin Cities
News & Record: Bennett student presentation calls for reparations for small HBCUs
The Independent: They received reparations in 2022. Did it really change their lives?
Philadelphia Inquirer: Reparations for Black people: Group urges City Council to create task force and enforce existing law
NBC San Diego: California Reparations Task Force Holds Public Hearings at San Diego State University
The Grio: Boston’s Reparations Task Force to study lingering impact of slavery and ‘repair harm’
Harvard Magazine: Teaching the Harvard Slavery Report
International News
The Guardian: We whose ancestors owned slaves want to make amends – but nations must also pay their due
WIRED: Climate Reparations Won’t Work (not an endorsement)
The Guardian: ‘My forefathers did something horribly wrong’: British slave owners’ family to apologise and pay reparations
Anti-History Movement
CNN: Missouri bill would ban critical race theory in schools and offer teacher training in ‘patriotism’
AL.com: Alabama Black History Month school programming is affected by CRT rule, officials complain
New York Times: Ron DeSantis Wants to Erase Black History. Why?
Yahoo! News: Florida county’s fight against critical race theory
Missouri Independent: Missouri Senate advances ‘Parents Bill of Rights’ with less focus on critical race theory
Stanford Law: Stanford’s Ralph Richard Banks on AP African American Studies, Culture Wars, and Critical Thinking
NBC News: Partisan divide over education goes beyond critical race theory
Educaton Week: America Must Confront the Black History It Teaches
NBC News: Frustrated Florida parents resolve to teach Black history to their kids
The Guardian: DeSantis’s corporate donors under fire for ‘hypocrisy’ over Black History Month
Great read