Halloween costume or social statement?
Jessica Black's choice to dress her son in a Ku Klux Klan outfit for Halloween has put her and the town of Craigsville in the national spotlight. The response, predictably, has not been kind.
Now, personally, I would never dress my son up in a Black Panther costume. (He's biracial. It'd be a bit of a contradiction anyway.)
But does that mean I'm not racist? Are racists only the people who do outwardly racist things? Is it possible to be a closet racist who navigates society a little more smoothly than Jessica Black?
In light of the current controversy, here are three questions I asked myself.
- Would I be willing to be part of the solution in the Craigsville Klan Costume scenario? The easy thing to do is get mad or get "even." Would I be willing to do the hard thing? Would I be willing to befriend Jessica Black (how ironic is that last name?) and allow her to truly have a friendship with a black person in order to remove some of the stereotypes?
- How am I working through racism in my own life? I'm black. I absolutely love being black and black culture. It comes with hardships for sure, but I wouldn't trade it for anything. I love the music, the food, the style of fashion and the unique brand of humor.
- That is NOT how you season chicken.
- That's NOT how Amazing Grace sounds at my church.
- Why is their table always the loudest in the cafeteria?
- Why is he wearing khakis? It's Saturday!
- Y'all follow directions to make Kool-Aid?
- I can't stand (insert any different culture than your own here) music.
Life becomes so much richer when we can appreciate the gifts each culture has to offer and so much more bland when we can only appreciate our own.
- Finally, am I against institutional racism or just overt racism? In Edward Gilbreath's book Reconciliation Blues, Gilbreath recounts a chapel message given by Rev. Russell Knight to Moody Bible Institute students in February of 1991. Wrestle through the implications of his quote.
That one stings the most. We've all seen examples of systemic racism. Some may favor our own race. Some may oppress our own race. Wright's point is that when we see it and we do nothing about it, we're actually saying "This particular racial injustice isn't worth fighting. We're willing to live with it."
I write blogs like these with the hopes of starting conversations. I'd love to hear your thoughts on how you wrestle through the issue of racism.
Chris Lassiter is a Christ-follower, a husband to Emily (read her guest blog here), a father of five wonderful kids, and a Young Life leader in his hometown in Staunton, VA. He has written for The News Leader, VIBE, HipHopDx.com, Rapzilla.com, Young Life Relationships and other publications. Moody Publishers recently published his first book, You're Grounded, which you can read about here.
1. Gilbreath, Edward, Reconcilation Blues (Downers Grove, Ill.: IVP Books) 2006, p. 49.
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