When gelato gets racial or a little girl hears the N-word for the first time

As the wheels continue to fly off my personal life, moments of simple joy and normalcy are increasingly hard to come by. My son’s unexpected visit home this week promised to be an opportunity to simply be present with family and savor the simple joys of togetherness. To share in the love that makes us a family, without the heady labels that often weigh us down.

Yet, as a mixed-raced family in a white space, the reality is that anytime we leave our house as a family, we risk incurring the wrath of the ignorant and hateful. To partake in the joys of the first treats of spring can turn ugly without notice and, sadly, a visit to Maine’s most populous city yesterday was the day when the ugly became personal and my nine-year-old daughter learned that there are people who will never know her essence but instead will reduce her to nothing more than a nigger.

I had no intentions of blogging about what happened to my family yesterday in Portland, though in a fit of anger, I did tweet about it in vague terms. However our degradation was witnessed by many, including a local news anchor who shared what she witnessed on her Facebook page and when a news anchor shares such a tale in a state the size of Maine…well, it seems I should just write about it myself.

My husband, son, daughter and I were walking in downtown Portland in an area known as the Old Port. The Old Port is a cute little area with cobblestone streets and an assortment of boutiques and eateries that draw crowds. We had already shopped at several local shops and were off to grab gelato before heading back to our little hamlet when suddenly and without warning as we were waiting to cross the street, a carload of young white men approached and without warning, the young man in the passenger seat yelled out very clearly and very loudly “Hey, niggers!” In that moment, I was frozen, I was scared…I was hurt. Yet before I had time to process what I was feeling, my son dropped the bags he had been carrying and ran off after the car.  As I snapped to and realized that my son might be doing something foolish, the sounds of my daughter wailing for her brother to not run pierced my soul. I called out to him, too, in the hopes he would stop but he said he had to run and never paused for a second.

We stood there unsure what to do next, a sense of shame seeping into our souls. To be othered so publicly in such a vile manner is not a comfortable feeling. In that moment, the three of us stood, not sure if we should run after my son. My husband walked across the street to see if he could see our boy, he couldn’t. My husband asked if I felt he should go after him, I said no. We needed to be here when he returned. In those excruciating moments, nothing was said to us, though what seemed like minutes later, a white man crossed the street and asked if we were okay. I explained what happened and he asked if I could recall what the car looked like and that he would go look for my son once his own ride arrived to pick him up.

Eventually, the standing became too much and the weight of worry caused me to start walking and look for my son, while I had my husband and daughter stay put. I walked a few blocks down the street and came upon my son who was walking back our way. He wasn’t harmed but his anger was apparent. As we walked, I held his arm just as I had done when he was a small boy which, considering he is now a full head-plus taller than me, is laughable. I asked him why he ran, he told me he ran for every time growing up in Maine that a grown man had called him a nigger and he was too little to do anything but hang his head. He ran because he is tired of hanging his head and feeling nothing but shame. He ran because having his baby sister hear those vile words was simply not acceptable to him. He ran because a pack of white men calling his mama a nigger was not okay. He knew the risk inherent in running but he also knew that at 23, he is tired of stuffing down the weight of racism and being asked to be the “better person” by silently taking the abuse and waiting for society to change when it clearly has little impetus to do so. He realized that sometimes, a man has to be willing to risk everything, including an ass kicking or a jail cell, to right some of the wrongs in this world. It may seem…or maybe even be…foolish, but there comes a time when one is simply tired of dealing with injustice.

I have spent the last 11 years writing about race and racism. I head one of the few organizations in the United States dedicated to anti-racism work. While I can go into an academic head space about racism, the fact is it is very different when it is your family and your children living with the reality and weight of being different and being seen as less than fully human. It hurts and if you think about it too much, it will crush your spirit. Yesterday’s events were a psychic gut punch in a week that had already doled out a more than a few psychic kicks.

When I tweeted about the exchange, I was literally blowing off steam on the ride back home and had no intention to really talk about it again. But waking up to numerous messages and to see my painful exchange shared publicly and in detail, well…I am grateful for the anchor’s observations but I am also saddened. Saddened that she was not comfortable enough after seeing the entire exchange to come over and ask “Are you okay?” In my professional work, I work with white people on race and the white American culture is a, all-too-polite space where too many times white people don’t speak up and unfortunately silence can be harmful. Racism is a system, and that silence upholds that system even when we don’t believe we are actively creating harm.

In having the story go public, it created many questions and one being: What happened afterwards? Well we had a sober ride home, the mood of the day being utterly destroyed on a day that we honestly needed to be good. We needed a perfect spring day to savor as we grapple with the uncertainty and fragility of life. Instead, we were reminded that the world can be an utterly ugly place, my daughter asking on the way home if we could move away from this place. I reminded her that ugly can live anywhere. If I felt there was a place that was safe and where we could be assured that we would never hear that word again, I would move heaven and earth to get us there. However, there is no such space in a world that is not comfortable with Black and Brown bodies, instead all I can do is prepare her for what she faces and pray that her gentle soul is not destroyed in the process. Prepare her to wear the mask and stuff down her self just enough to stay strong but not too much otherwise the weight of the mask that Black and Brown people wear in spaces becomes too much and will eat you alive.

So, that’s what happens when you go out on a gorgeous spring day and you’re Black. Your humanity, security and even dignity can get snatched away in a second. You feel the pain, you try not to let it utterly consume you, and then you take it and stick in the jar and keep it moving.

I will keep moving. As will my family. Sometimes, if you try to tear us down, we will run. Not away from you but after you, and you will see us in your rearview mirror or over your shoulder. Even if you outpace us, we will ensure you do not forget us or take us lightly ever again.

226 thoughts on “When gelato gets racial or a little girl hears the N-word for the first time”

  1. In American popular culture it has become a cliche, against all that history has shown, that white people come to the aide of oppressed minorities; Mississippi Burning, Dances With Wolves, on and on. As if to blur the reasons why the intervention is needed,and to allow us to feel that, in spite of the horrors of genocide, slavery, Jim Crow, when push came to shove, the benevolent white person would come to the rescue. The underlying message being “youl need us to save you from us”.
    I can’t imagine the resentment you must feel.
    As to the assault on your family, as a white male, were this to happen to my son and my daughter I would feel revulsion, fear for my children, and rage.
    That is how far I could understand it, again, as a white guy.
    I will never be able to comprehend how a person of color could feel having grown up with the possibility of hearing daily this hatred and evil. And then to see it directed at their children.
    I’m so sorry you and your family still has to.

  2. Come to London. No, it’s not free of racism but it is unrecognisably better than pretty much anywhere in the USA. People get fired for playing songs on the radio that have that word in, behaviour like that if those men is illegal and, in London at least, that law is actually upheld. How the USA continues to call itself The Land Of The Free is beyond belief. If nothing else, come to London to take a look around. You’ll love it.

  3. This is quite an unfortunate coincidence as my SO and I took a couple of boys from the school he teaches at to Old Port to walk around for the day this past Saturday. Two of the boys were black, one Mexican, my SO is also black, and our mixed baby were crossing the street when a car drove by with two white boys hanging out of the windows with their shirts off yelling things at us (most of which we couldn’t understand) and pointing. I did catch a “monkey” and “fuckers” in the words they were spewing. I would like to think this is just one sad miserable group of boys who likes to terrorize unsuspecting shoppers with derogatory words but this is not the first time we have experienced these incidents in Maine and I doubt it will be the last…

  4. Thank You for writing. I am sorry you and your family had to experience that. I shout out in love what they shout in hate. “Hey family! Happy Spring! I’m so glad we get to share this sunny day.”

  5. As a black woman living in Portland, this has happened to me several times in public. Burns every time. Thank you for your thoughts on silence being complicit.

  6. Hang in there and be strong. Not all of us are ignorant crackers (although certain segments of the Republican party would like to see that). I suspect the vast majority of Mainers are on your side in this.

  7. Thank you for being so wise and sharing your insight with all of us. I pray that one day we truly will live in a place where the color of your skin doesn’t matter to anyone.

  8. I understand racism is still a thing in the US, and around the world, and we’re all correct in the fact that it’s not good thing. We’re all the same under our skin, and we shouldn’t be judged by it’s color.
    So, why do you feel the need to consistently point out that you’re a black girl, in a “white” area, and that the news anchor, who innocently though she was helping, was white? Just from reading the first few paragraphs in your blog, it looks to me like you leave the house every day looking for a fight. Well, you found the fight, and now you’re turning the tables. You’re using the internet and social media to hang your head out the window, and cyber bully a white girl. And I’m not saying what she did was right or wrong, I’m saying that you should be ashamed of yourself, because you are part of the problem.

    • Since in skin color we are talking ONLY about a genetic variation… in the ideal world “the color of your skin” should not be an issue —- since all of us—- accept actual albino’s are variants of tan/ black/ brown/ red/ yellow/ orange skin tone hues…. but we are anything but living in the ideal world… and this is particularly true of the historical antecedents of the United States. Beginning with the Boston based “Liberty Laws of 1641” where the Puritan oligarchy changed the terms of Indenture servants within English Civil law; that is, the “Boston Don’s” decided if you were “of color” you could be indentured for life; if no so, your term would remain that of 7 years…. we have consistently discriminated against those that we have identified as “of color”. Hence even though the genetic make up of the African prisoner who survived slavery in the United States is far more superior to that of the European colonial … he/ she is still delegated to the back of the bus in the United States and is still subjected to the crumbs that the “entitled white ” is willing to throw out — that is why we need such debate as this ! AND WE ARE ALL A PART OF THE PROBLEM!

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