Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Tamir Rice and race in our society




Recently, a twelve year old boy name Tamir Rice was shot and killed by police officers. He was in a park, alone, playing with a toy gun. The gun was a close replica of a real gun, and the red plastic that identified it as a toy had been removed.  Eyewitnesses say he was pulling the gun on people passing by. When the police arrived, he pulled the gun and was promptly shot. He later died from the injuries he sustained. 

The court did not convict the police officers, in regards to the shooting. There is significant disagreement as to whether this decision brought justice or not.

My intent here, in this blog, is not pass judgment… on anybody. I was not there. I am not a police officer. I did not know Tamir Rice. My goal is to express a sincere and profound sadness for the entire event. 

While I was contemplating how to approach this blog with respect, I repeatedly returned to the process of humbling myself. Reminding myself that my skin is white, as is my children’s. Neither of my children, my son or daughter, is lightly to be discriminated against due to skin color. My daughter potentially for gender, but not race.  While I have (currently) and will likely have (in the future) plenty of reasons to worry about my children, race will not be the basis for this concern. My child based sleepless nights will have an entirely different source. 

The Cleveland police department released the surveillance video of the event. Initially, I was undecided as to whether or not to watch it, finally deciding in favor. What I saw made me heart weep.

My heart wept for the parents of this child, who will have to bury their young son, a process no parent should ever have to suffer. I, personally, cannot imagine the pain of burying a child and I don’t ever want to. Just the thought of it makes me want to cry. 

My heart wept for the child, who (for whatever reason) didn’t refrain from pointing his toy weapon at the officers; although he had probably been told so many times that it was a terrible idea. If I had a penny for every time I repeat commands to my children, ones that they still don’t follow if I’m not looking, I’d be a millionaire. Tragically, 12 year old boys are not known for their sound decision making and he won’t grow up to be mad at his younger self.

My heart wept for the police officers, who joined the police force with the intent of contributing to society, not taking a child from it. Men who have loved ones of their own, and who had to make a snap decision with little to no proof. Perhaps they even have their own 12 year old child at home, and that face was the last thing they saw before they pulled the trigger. If either of those officers were my husband, I’d want him to come home to me. Would it be any less painful for me (and our children) to bury my husband/their father, had it been a real gun and the kid had pulled the trigger? 

My heart wept for our society. All of us. Every single one of us. We live in a world where race is such a barrier to civilized interaction. Some like to say that racism is no longer an issue. They are delusional. Of course it’s a problem. It’s a raging problem. The miscommunication between cultures does not allow for the open conversation that would actually help. If I were to claim that being white does not provide me and my children a higher level of safety in public, I would be lying and/or blind.

Let me tell you a story.

When I was working in a public high school, there was an incident where an older white teacher and a younger black student disagreed about an issue of discipline. I never knew learned the details of their disagreement. The teacher became stern and the student became agitated. He talked back, gesturing wildly with his hands and raising his voice. The teacher claimed that she had been assaulted. The student replied that she was lying. 

They were both right. The teacher did, authentically, feel assaulted. The physical proximity of the student, combined with the volume of speech and size of hand gestures, made her feel unsafe. She felt assaulted. The student, however, had no intent of making her feel unsafe. He simply reacted like a teenage boy with lower capacity to control his emotions. He was mad, furious. He didn’t feel heard, and so he kept attempting to make his point. His methods did not win him favor with his teacher. 

In an ideal world, there would have been a space in the middle. A space where the student could feel heard without explosive behavior and the teacher could feel in control of her classroom without being inflexible. As a person, I understand them both and have no intent of taking sides. 

Racism is a dangerous thing. It’s real. It’s out there. The perpetrators of it, often times, do it without intent and without knowledge of having done it.  They do and say things that land badly, even though their intent was good. With a safer society, however, the offended could speak up and educate the offender. The offender could explain their intent and offended could explain their reaction. A middle ground could be reached, with both compromising a bit. Both sides acknowledging the need to meet in the middle and respect the diversity of our communities. In the case of the student and teacher, perhaps the student could have felt safe to apologize for scaring her, and the teacher could have found a way to understand the true intentions of the student’s actions. 

Perhaps the police officers could have made a different choice when they approached the kid, one that gave them more options in the middle ground. Perhaps the kid could have had his “oh shit” moment earlier and realized it was time to stop making silly choices.  Perhaps..Perhaps…Perhaps…

I am not so naïve as to believe that all offenders are accidental. Some, on both sides, are intentional and unapologetic. They are proud of their stance on hate and have no desire to change. This saddens me profoundly and the commentary I have on these individuals has no place in this blog, as it would ruin the optimistic tone that I am determined to maintain. 

The question I ask myself is this. If the kid with the toy gun had been white , and that where the only difference, would it have ended differently?