Here is a story that I heard on NPR this week. It is a tale of a remarkable little girl. A tale that deserves to be retold. It goes like this.
In a small town (Population 9,027) located in northwestern Essex County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, about 16 miles (26 km) west of New York City and 6 miles (9.7 km) north-west of Newark, a little White girl aged nine went out to work on a science project and to help her community. She had learned that spotted lanternflies were a nuisance species and she decided to collect as many as she could and use them in a science exhibit to educate others about them. Until this week, the most noteworthy thing about Caldwell was that it was the birthplace of Grover Cleveland, the 22nd and 24th President of the United States. He was the only president to serve two non-consecutive terms, was born in Caldwell on March 18, 1837.
As the little girl went from tree to tree collecting these bugs, a former council member and neighbor named Gordon Lawshe saw the little girl going from tree to tree and picking something off the trees. He was not sure what she was doing but he decided to help her. He put his jacket on and went out to see how he could assist her.
Wait a Minute! Hold on there Persico. You have got your facts all wrong. That is not how the story goes!
Oh, that’s right. I forgot. It was not a little White girl; it was a little Black girl. It was a former city council member named Gordon Lawshe. However, he did not go out to help her. Seeing a nine-year-old Black girl going from tree to tree terrified him. He wasted no time calling the police on our little budding scientist. You can probably guess Gordon’s skin color so I won’t bother telling you.
After the police came and traumatized little Bobbi Wilson, they realized that she posed no threat to the community. Fortunately, her mother had come out before they took Bobbi away in handcuffs.
Now there are many in America who say that racism is dead. They believe that Black people are always playing the “Race Card” when they talk about unfair treatment or systemic racism. Just the other day, the Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction (Tom Horne) said in an interview that there is NO MORE systemic racism in the USA. This man is in charge of education in our state!
In 2008, the U.S. House of Representative issued a formal apology for slavery and Jim Crow laws. This was passed by a voice vote. A rather imprecise method of voting which shields anyone from being identified with a particular stance. A year later, the Senate advanced S. Con. Res. 26 of the 111th Congress, a concurrent resolution apologizing for the enslavement and racial segregation of African Americans. Republicans now seem bent on reversing this apology by making it harder for Blacks, other minorities, and poor people to vote. While monetary reparations were given to Japanese Americans for their internment and mistreatment during WW II, any talk of reparations for slavery generates heated arguments.
Today, the country is seething over the idea of addressing racism in the public schools. It is feared that White Children will feel guilty. Mention Critical Race Theory and you will get shut down quick in school districts all over the country. Even worse is the onslaught on textbooks to sanitize them so that “negative” aspects of American history are omitted.
But all of the above is very academic. For little Black Bobbi Wilson, it probably will not mean much. She would just like to be treated like any nine-year-old White girl with a penchant for science would be treated. Fortunately, our story does not end with her near arrest. National Public Radio published the following article about Bobbi on their website. I have included some excerpts from the article as well as a link to the entire article. It is very heartwarming and worth reading. There are many good people in America and this helps us to remember that.
Nine-year-old Bobbi Wilson may be in the fourth grade, but last month the Yale School of Public Health held a ceremony honoring the budding scientist’s recent work.
The university entered Bobbi’s collection of 27 spotted lanternflies — an extremely invasive species that is harmful to trees and other plants — into the Peabody Museum of Natural History database. Bobbi was also presented with the title of “donor scientist” during the Jan. 20 ceremony.
“We wanted to show her bravery and how inspiring she is, and we just want to make sure she continues to feel honored and loved by the Yale community,” Ijeoma Opara, an assistant professor at the school, said in a statement.
Weeks Earlier:
Former City Council member, Gordon Lawshe calls the police department to report: “There’s a little Black woman walking, spraying stuff on the sidewalks and trees on Elizabeth and Florence,” Lawshe told the dispatcher, according to a call obtained by CNN.
“I don’t know what the hell she’s doing. Scares me, though,” Lawshe added.
Outside, Bobbi, a petite child who wears pink-framed glasses, was doing her bit to comply with the state’s Stomp it Out! campaign, which urges New Jersey residents to help eradicate the spotted lanternfly infestation. She’d learned about it at school and made her own version of an insect repellent she’d seen on TikTok. Making her way from tree to tree, Bobbi would spray the bugs, pluck them from the tree and drop them into a plastic bottle.
Bobbi was still at it when an officer arrived, curious about what she was doing. Body camera footage shows officer Kevin O’Neill approach the child before her mother, Monique Joseph, intervenes.
“You know, you hear about racism; you kind of experience it in your peripheral. If you’re lucky in your life. It doesn’t come knocking on your door. That morning when it happened, my world stopped,” Bobbi’s mother said, according to the university. She added: “The whole community, the science community, got together and said, ‘She’s one of us and we’re not going to let her lose her steam for STEM. We’re going to support the family, we’re going to support this girl.”
So all’s well that ends well right? Well, not exactly. There are thousands of little Black girls and little Black boys in America. When will this end for them? What will it take to end racism? When will we stop judging people by the color of their skins and instead judge them by their character and morality?
What do character, culture and race have to do with each other? That is the subject of my blog this week. I believe that each of these concepts is not well understood by people in America or in any other country for that matter. There is a science to understanding these concepts but there is also an art that comes from experience and living. Both science and experience are necessary to understand each concept and their relationship to each other. Since my experience can only come from where I stand, I note that I stand as a white, USA born, male in the early 21st Century. Standing anywhere else would no doubt give me a different experience and a different perspective on these ideas. Let me start with first defining what the term Character means to me. I am going to give you my take and not Webster’s dictionary definition.
Character:
I think there are four major elements of character. I believe these are: integrity, wisdom, tolerance, and courage. Integrity is standing up for what one believes. Integrity is the opposite of sycophancy. Sycophants go along with someone for an underlying motive or future advantage that they hope will accrue for their fawning behavior. People with integrity do what they believe is right whether or not any advantage will accrue from their efforts. People with integrity are consistent in their stated ideas and do not read the polls to see which way public opinion is blowing.
It has been said that: “Knowledge helps you to make a living while wisdom helps you to make a life.” Wisdom is the ability to as Father Sthokal would have said “Exercise discernment.” The Greeks would have said that wisdom is the ability to exercise the Golden Mean. The ability to live life in moderation and not to be seduced by extremes or excesses. Many a smart people there are who you know are very stupid. I see college professors who can see no further than the myopia induced by their academic disciplines. Thus, they see everything through only one lens.
A favorite quote of mine respecting tolerance and courage states that: “The test of tolerance comes when we are in the majority. The test of courage comes when we are in the minority.” — Ralph W. Sockman. It takes real courage to stand up for what you believe when everyone is against you. In the USA today, it takes courage to stand up for immigrants and poor people. The greed in American life has prejudiced so many people who mistakenly believe that the poor and needy are taking their jobs or money away. People are afraid to speak out because they are afraid that they will be labeled as Un-American.
Tolerance is the willingness to respect and stand up for someone when you are in the majority and they are in the minority. Difficult it is to speak out against your peers and tribe. When someone has an idea that does not fit with the normal conception, the tolerant person will try to hear them out. Tolerant people respect those with seemingly strange and weird or wild ideas. The tolerant person does not say “That is crazy or that is a stupid idea.” A recent example I think that shows both tolerance and courage is the song by Tyler Childers – “Long Violent History.” You don’t hear many country singers supporting the Black Lives Matter movement or speaking out against racism.
Character is not limited to any race, religion, culture, nation, or ethnicity
Culture:
When I met my current wife Karen, she had an adopted Korean daughter. Susan or Lee Hei Sook was six years old when Karen went though the procedures to adopt her. She was an orphan who did know where her mom and dad were. Many years later when Susan was out of college and expecting her second child she decided to search for her birth mother. Through her amazing efforts, Susan was able to find both her birth mother and birth father. I was fortunate enough to travel with Susan and Karen to Korea to meet both of them. They had been divorced for many years and the story of Susan’s being sent to an orphanage would require a blog of its own.
What is remarkable about the above story for me is Karen’s effort to help Susan retain her culture, heritage and language and even support her efforts to find her birth mother. Karen cooked Korean food for Susan, sent Susan to Korean Camp each summer and learned how to eat with chopsticks. Too many people in the USA believe that culture must be abandoned and that being having an ethnic or cultural identify is incompatible with being patriotic. I know many of my generation who were not taught their parents’ language since there was a strong drive to become assimilated by many immigrants. To desire to learn Korean would strike many of the “Greatest Generation” as a useless activity. It did not strike my wife Karen this way.
Many older and younger people feel that our American culture is the best culture and that immigrants must discard other cultural affiliations in order to become assimilated. The holy grail for Black people (at least as indicated by many white people) is something called integration. This basically means abandoning any idea of “Blackness” and becoming as white as possible. The same holy grail of assimilation or integration was foisted on many Native Americans. Indians were forced to attend white “culture” schools and were not allowed to practice their native languages or wear indigenous clothing. This rejection of culture has led to a considerable degree of prejudice and outright racism in the USA. Witness the incarceration of Japanese Americans during the Second World War.
What is culture? Culture is a universal phenomenon. There is no such thing as not having a cultural identify. Culture is forged for every living human being regardless of where they live. Culture is the norms, habits, rituals, protocols, traditions, and beliefs of a group that you identify with. Everyone has a culture. Even hermits develop a culture based on their habits and ideology. Gangs, tribes, schools, companies, organizations, ethnic groups, countries, nationalities, and any group with a set of shared norms and patterns develops its own unique culture. I grew up with an Italian father and a mixed Irish-German mother. I always lived in an Italian neighborhood when I was growing up. I never learned to speak Italian, but I learned many Italian swear words. I hung around with a gang who were mostly Italians. My family had one culture. My gang had another culture.
I went into the United States Air Force when I was 18 years old. The Air Force had its own culture. The Army had its own culture. I would guess there is not a person on the face of the earth who does not belong to more than one culture. I would bet that most of us can identify with many cultures. Thus, the term “cultural appropriation” is rather quixotic in many ways. On the one hand, people might feel flattered that you want to merge symbols of their culture in your own traditions. However, many other groups feel insulted and abused by such appropriation. I can understand Indians who think that white people have no right to acquire their culture. When your culture has been denigrated by the majority group and you have been maligned for trying to practice your culture, outrage against any outside group using your cultural icons for profit or fame would be a normal reaction.
Belonging to more than one culture does not necessarily mean that you should or must give up your identification with another culture. Culture is a grounding for humans. Culture helps us navigate life by adopting behaviors and norms that will help us fit in. Culture is a means to share life with others. As a veteran, I have many stories and fond memories of times spent with men whom I initially had nothing in common with. Yet years later, I still enjoy meeting with veterans because we share so many of the same experiences concerning life in the military.
“Culture does not make people. People make culture. If it is true that the full humanity of women is not our culture, then we can and must make it our culture.” — ― Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, We Should All Be Feminists
Race:
What is race? Scientists say that there is no such thing as race. How can this be? Employment applications, loan applications, credit card applications and hundreds of other official documents include demographic questions where you must identify yourself as Black, White, Native America, Asian American, Latino and sometimes Other. Black people identify with Black people as members of a common race. The same is true for Caucasians, Indians, Latinos and Asians. If there is no “race” how can there be “racism”? Yet, the concept of “racism” is enshrined in laws both for and against “racism.” If there is no race, why do I see people of different colors and backgrounds who have common acceptance of the idea that they are different from me.” What can we attribute these different physical characteristics to if not race?
“Researchers who have since looked at people at the genetic level now say that the whole category of race is misconceived. Indeed, when scientists set out to assemble the first complete human genome, which was a composite of several individuals, they deliberately gathered samples from people who self-identified as members of different races. In June 2000, when the results were announced at a White House ceremony, Craig Venter, a pioneer of DNA sequencing, observed, “The concept of race has no genetic or scientific basis.” — National Geographic, Elizabeth Kolbert, March 12th, 2018
Most of the world’s citizens outside Africa originally migrated from Africa. These early immigrants through genetic mutations and adaptation to different environments gradually gained different features. The most predominant feature being skin color. Skin color is not uniform throughout the world as we can see in places like India, Southeast Asia, China, South America, and even among the indigenous people in the USA. Many people with “dark” skin coloring in the world would not say that they were Black or White. I have been to more than thirty other countries. I have noticed that “Black” people or people from an African Ancestry are not called African in these countries. In the USA, we have used the term African-Americans but in Sweden, Africans are not called African-Swedes. The same is true in many other countries across the globe. Here in the USA, we seem obsessed with the concept of race. Evidence shows that the genetic differences between individuals are greater than the genetic differences between the so-called “races.”
A randomly-selected American can be more genetically similar to a randomly-selected Korean than to a fellow randomly-selected American. Similarly, a randomly-selected Ethiopian can be more genetically similar to a randomly-selected Norwegian than to a fellow randomly-selected Ethiopian. This kind of occurrence is so common that simply comparing the genomes of two people will not help you classify them into what the world currently recognizes as their “race”. — Kristen Hovet, There Is No Such Thing as Race at the Genetic Level
But let’s get down to some common sense and away from science and genetics. Adolf Hitler said that “Race” mattered more than anything. Blood and Soil or “Blut und Boden: was a key ideology of the Nazi Party. Hitler believed that German blood defined a German race which was superior to other races. This superiority led to the extermination camps wherein “inferiors” were eliminated. These inferiors included many people from other “races”, religions, ideologies, and with different physical characteristics. There was one tribe of Germans and not belonging to this tribe was a potential death sentence. Hitler set up a pseudo-scientific structure to discriminate between “True Germans” and other inferior “races.” There never was and never will be a scientific basis for a German race, but this did not stop millions of Germans subscribing to the Nazi ideology of Germanic superiority.
Conclusions:
If race does not exist but culture exists, what does this mean for group identity? How strong should group identify be? Should I sacrifice all for my group and fight to the death for my cultural identify? What if I believe that my culture is better than your culture? Could culture become just another banner to wave for those who want to commit acts of prejudice and discrimination on the basis of some perceived differences? I think this is a distinct possibility and has indeed occurred throughout history. How then can we have a cultural identify without resorting to racism and discrimination?
I think the solution lies in a hierarchy. One hierarchy is evil and leads to racism and discrimination as well as genocide and war. One hierarchy is good and leads to respect, tolerance, acceptance, and harmony among people.
The Evil hierarchy puts culture, race, ethnicity, religion, gender, nationality, patriotism first and character is second. In this hierarchy, the notion of character is not as important as the notion of skin color, ideology, tradition, language, norms, and many other common bases for group acceptance. You are first and foremost either a member of my group or not. If you are a member of my group, I will then judge you on the basis of your character. However, if you are not a member of my group, your character does not matter. You are evil by virtue of being an outsider and as an evil person, you need to be punished.
The Good hierarchy puts character first and group identify second. I don’t care if you do belong to my tribe, if you lack character, integrity, and wisdom then I need to deal with you accordingly. I must of course exercise good character for myself. I judge you first on your character. I should also be judged on my character. If we belong to or have similar tribal, ethnic, cultural, religious, ideological ideas or traditions, so much the better. However, my relationship to you is based first on your character and only secondarily on which tribe you belong to. I do not dismiss the importance of tribal or cultural affiliation. If I am not of your culture or tribe, I will respect, understand and hopefully even be able to share some of your cultural traditions. Diversity is a means of obtaining knowledge and ideas that can help us all become better than we are.
I will sum up my message here with the following points.
Race is a chimera and a substitute for genuine relationships with people
Racism is a negative stereotype based on ignorance and bigotry
Culture exists and is real. It can define us and allow us to lead more interesting lives
Culture if used as a measure of goodness or excellence can lead to prejudice and discrimination
Character is the most important criteria for valuing people
Tread lightly on all judgements of others
Here I must issue a warning and an extremely strict caveat. Beware taking the role of judging others on the basis of what you think character means. I have no doubt that character exists, but I would be very uneasy thinking that I should or could be the ultimate judge of good character or bad character. Character is a little like quality. Many say they know it when they see it but defining it can be very elusive. If someone lies, cheats, steals, robs, rapes, assaults, abuses others or breaks the law, we may well think that they are a bad character. On the other hand, a person who is honest, truthful, compassionate, and helps others may well be thought of as a good character. However, time and circumstances may well render judgements made today as inaccurate in the future. No one has the insight or knowledge to ever know the goodness or badness of another human being fully.
“We don’t care whether you are Christian or Muslim or Jew or Hindu; all we care is the goodness inside you because only the goodness inside you can make you a good human!” — Mehmet Murat ildan
“We are brothers and sisters not because of the color of our skin but because of what is inside of us.” —- J. Persico
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