The real story of Rosa Parks -- and why we need to confront myths about Black history | David Ikard

103,066 views

2020-02-26 ・ TED


New videos

The real story of Rosa Parks -- and why we need to confront myths about Black history | David Ikard

103,066 views ・ 2020-02-26

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:14
I am the proud father of two beautiful children,
0
14246
4947
00:19
Elijah, 15, and Octavia, 12.
1
19217
4318
00:24
When Elijah was in the fourth grade,
2
24313
3317
00:27
he came to me,
3
27654
1564
00:29
came home from school bubbling over with excitement
4
29242
2861
00:32
about what he had learned that day about African-American history.
5
32127
4919
00:37
Now, I'm an African-American and cultural studies professor,
6
37070
4432
00:41
and so, as you can imagine,
7
41526
2141
00:43
African-American culture is kind of serious around my home.
8
43691
2927
00:46
So I was very proud that my son was excited about what he had learned
9
46642
4246
00:50
that day in school.
10
50912
1151
00:52
So I said, "What did you learn?"
11
52087
1940
00:54
He said, "I learned about Rosa Parks."
12
54051
3478
00:57
I said, "OK, what did you learn about Rosa Parks?"
13
57907
3052
01:00
He said, "I learned that Rosa Parks was this frail, old black woman
14
60983
5514
01:06
in the 1950s
15
66521
1850
01:08
in Montgomery, Alabama.
16
68395
2434
01:10
And she sat down on this bus,
17
70853
2250
01:13
and she had tired feet,
18
73127
1968
01:15
and when the bus driver told her to give up her seat to a white patron,
19
75119
4933
01:20
she refused because she had tired feet.
20
80076
2676
01:22
It had been a long day,
21
82776
1265
01:24
and she was tired of oppression,
22
84065
1818
01:25
and she didn't give up her seat.
23
85907
1889
01:27
And she marched with Martin Luther King,
24
87820
1929
01:29
and she believed in nonviolence."
25
89773
2192
01:31
And I guess he must have looked at my face
26
91989
3164
01:35
and saw that I was a little less than impressed
27
95177
4530
01:39
by his
28
99731
1333
01:41
... um ...
29
101484
1220
01:42
history lesson.
30
102754
1330
01:44
And so he stopped, and he was like, "Dad, what's wrong? What did I get wrong?"
31
104134
4654
01:48
I said, "Son, you didn't get anything wrong,
32
108812
2089
01:50
but I think your teacher got a whole lot of things wrong."
33
110925
2760
01:53
(Laughter)
34
113709
1010
01:54
He said, "Well, what do you mean?"
35
114743
1672
01:56
I said, "Rosa Parks was not tired.
36
116439
3240
02:00
She was not old.
37
120780
2549
02:03
And she certainly didn't have tired feet."
38
123353
3056
02:06
He said, "What?"
39
126433
1164
02:07
I said, "Yes!
40
127621
1158
02:08
Rosa Parks was only 42 years old" --
41
128803
2195
02:12
Yeah, you're shocked, right? Never heard that.
42
132261
2344
02:14
"Rosa Parks was only 42 years old,
43
134629
1957
02:16
she had only worked six hours that day, and she was a seamstress
44
136610
4744
02:21
and her feet were just fine.
45
141378
2368
02:23
(Laughter)
46
143770
1131
02:24
The only thing that she was tired of
47
144925
2699
02:27
was she was tired of inequality.
48
147648
2423
02:30
She was tired of oppression."
49
150095
2066
02:32
And my son said,
50
152185
1288
02:33
"Well, why would my teacher tell me this thing?
51
153497
3958
02:37
This is confusing for me."
52
157479
1874
02:39
Because he loved his teacher, and she was a good teacher,
53
159377
3402
02:42
a young-ish, 20-something white woman,
54
162803
2943
02:45
really, really smart, pushed him, so I liked her as well.
55
165770
3711
02:49
But he was confused. "Why would she tell me this?" he said.
56
169505
2993
02:52
He said, "Dad, tell me more. Tell me more. Tell me more about Rosa Parks."
57
172522
3511
02:56
And I said, "Son, I'll do you one better."
58
176057
2253
02:58
He was like, "What?"
59
178884
1153
03:00
I said, "I'm going to buy her autobiography,
60
180061
2060
03:02
and I'm going to let you read it yourself."
61
182145
2038
03:04
(Laughter)
62
184207
2692
03:07
So as you can imagine,
63
187787
1647
03:10
Elijah wasn't too excited about this new, lengthy homework assignment
64
190453
4637
03:15
that his dad had just given him, but he took it in stride.
65
195114
3778
03:19
And he came back after he had read it,
66
199451
3646
03:23
and he was excited about what he had learned.
67
203121
3918
03:27
He said, "Dad, not only was Rosa Parks not initially into nonviolence,
68
207063
6999
03:34
but Rosa Parks's grandfather, who basically raised her
69
214086
4536
03:38
and was light enough to pass as white,
70
218646
2160
03:40
used to walk around town with his gun in his holster,
71
220830
4640
03:45
and people knew if you messed with Mr. Parks's children or grandchildren,
72
225494
4955
03:50
he would put a cap in your proverbial bottom."
73
230473
4211
03:54
(Laughter)
74
234708
1202
03:55
Right?
75
235934
1160
03:57
He was not someone to mess with.
76
237118
2319
03:59
And he said, "I also learned that Rosa Parks married a man in Raymond
77
239922
5868
04:05
who was a lot like her grandfather."
78
245814
3163
04:09
He would organize.
79
249884
1445
04:11
He was a civil rights activist.
80
251353
2316
04:13
He would organize events
81
253693
3615
04:17
and sometimes the events would be at Rosa Parks's home.
82
257332
4939
04:22
And one time Rosa Parks remarked
83
262295
2020
04:24
that there were so many guns on the table,
84
264339
2315
04:26
because they were prepared for somebody to come busting into the door
85
266678
3268
04:29
that they were prepared for whatever was going to go down,
86
269970
2763
04:32
that Rosa Parks said, "There were so many guns on the table
87
272757
2830
04:35
that I forgot to even offer them coffee or food."
88
275611
2729
04:38
This is who Rosa Parks was.
89
278832
2571
04:41
And in fact, Rosa Parks, when she was sitting on that bus that day,
90
281427
4686
04:46
waiting for those police officers to arrive
91
286137
2638
04:48
and not knowing what was going to happen to her,
92
288799
2947
04:51
she was not thinking about Martin Luther King,
93
291770
2157
04:53
who she barely knew.
94
293951
1456
04:55
She was not thinking about nonviolence or Gandhi.
95
295431
2840
04:58
She was thinking about her grandfather,
96
298295
1931
05:00
a gun-toting, take-no-mess grandfather.
97
300250
4026
05:04
That's who Rosa Parks was thinking about.
98
304300
3538
05:07
My son was mesmerized by Rosa Parks,
99
307862
3674
05:11
and I was proud of him to see this excitement.
100
311560
2947
05:15
But then I still had a problem.
101
315125
2058
05:17
Because I still had to go his school
102
317207
2555
05:19
and address the issue with his teacher,
103
319786
2007
05:21
because I didn't want her to continue to teach the kids
104
321817
3299
05:25
obviously false history.
105
325140
2372
05:27
So I'm agonizing over this,
106
327885
1431
05:29
primarily because I understand, as an African-American man,
107
329340
3460
05:32
that whenever you talk to whites about racism
108
332824
2344
05:35
or anything that's racially sensitive,
109
335192
2005
05:37
there's usually going to be a challenge.
110
337221
1958
05:39
This is what white sociologist Robin DiAngelo calls "white fragility."
111
339203
6060
05:45
She argues that, in fact,
112
345287
1797
05:47
because whites have so little experience being challenged
113
347108
4039
05:51
about their white privilege
114
351171
1473
05:52
that whenever even the most minute challenge is brought before them,
115
352668
3495
05:56
they usually cry,
116
356187
1823
05:58
get angry
117
358034
1151
05:59
or run.
118
359209
1151
06:00
(Laughter)
119
360384
1005
06:01
And I have experienced them all.
120
361413
2987
06:04
And so, when I was contemplating confronting his teacher,
121
364424
5812
06:10
I wasn't happy about it,
122
370260
1573
06:11
but I was like, this is a necessary evil
123
371857
2063
06:13
of being a black parent trying to raise self-actualized black children.
124
373944
4302
06:18
So I called Elijah to me and said,
125
378270
1677
06:19
"Elijah, I'm going to set up an appointment with your teacher
126
379971
4773
06:24
and try and correct this
127
384768
1208
06:26
and maybe your principal.
128
386000
1237
06:27
What do you think?"
129
387261
1401
06:28
And Elijah said,
130
388686
1151
06:29
"Dad, I have a better idea."
131
389861
2136
06:33
And I said, "Really? What's your idea?"
132
393021
1953
06:34
He said, "We have a public speaking assignment,
133
394998
4630
06:39
and why don't I use that public speaking assignment
134
399652
2565
06:42
to talk about debunking the myths of Rosa Parks?"
135
402241
3563
06:46
And I was like,
136
406756
1157
06:48
"Well, that is a good idea."
137
408815
1447
06:51
So Elijah goes to school,
138
411850
3233
06:55
he does his presentation,
139
415107
1779
06:56
he comes back home,
140
416910
1494
06:58
and I could see something positive happened.
141
418428
2373
07:00
I said, "Well, what happened, son?"
142
420825
1911
07:03
He said, "Well, later on in that day,
143
423231
2180
07:05
the teacher pulled me aside,
144
425435
1944
07:07
and she apologized to me for giving that misinformation."
145
427403
4596
07:12
And then something else miraculous happened the next day.
146
432771
3528
07:16
She actually taught a new lesson on Rosa Parks,
147
436323
3709
07:20
filling in the gaps that she had left and correcting the mistakes that she made.
148
440056
4314
07:24
And I was so, so proud of my son.
149
444394
4594
07:29
But then I thought about it.
150
449956
2688
07:33
And I got angry.
151
453875
1215
07:35
And I got real angry.
152
455565
1556
07:38
Why? Why would I get angry?
153
458344
1718
07:40
Because my nine-year-old son had to educate his teacher
154
460878
4974
07:45
about his history,
155
465876
1491
07:47
had to educate his teacher about his own humanity.
156
467391
3050
07:50
He's nine years old.
157
470465
1669
07:52
He should be thinking about basketball or soccer
158
472784
3217
07:56
or the latest movie.
159
476025
2471
07:58
He should not be thinking about having to take the responsibility
160
478520
4167
08:02
of educating his teacher,
161
482711
2363
08:05
his students,
162
485098
3063
08:08
about himself, about his history.
163
488185
2467
08:10
That was a burden that I carried.
164
490676
1627
08:12
That was a burden that my parents carried
165
492327
2023
08:14
and generations before them carried.
166
494374
1730
08:16
And now I was seeing my son take on that burden, too.
167
496128
4817
08:21
You see, that's why Rosa Parks wrote her autobiography.
168
501513
4930
08:26
Because during her lifetime,
169
506467
1738
08:28
if you can imagine,
170
508229
1516
08:29
you do this amazing thing,
171
509769
4615
08:34
you're alive and you're talking about your civil rights activism,
172
514408
3919
08:38
and a story emerges
173
518351
1933
08:40
in which somebody is telling the world
174
520308
2891
08:43
that you were old and you had tired feet
175
523223
2640
08:45
and you just were an accidental activist,
176
525887
2321
08:48
not that you had been activist by then for 20 years,
177
528232
3861
08:52
not that the boycott had been planned for months,
178
532117
3374
08:55
not that you were not even the first or the second or even the third woman
179
535515
4471
09:00
to be arrested for doing that.
180
540010
1857
09:03
You become an accidental activist, even in her own lifetime.
181
543160
4832
09:08
So she wrote that autobiography to correct the record,
182
548016
3130
09:11
because what she wanted to remind people of
183
551170
2885
09:15
was that this
184
555468
2099
09:17
is what it was like
185
557591
1191
09:19
in the 1950s
186
559813
3171
09:23
trying to be black in America
187
563008
2717
09:25
and fight for your rights.
188
565749
2338
09:28
During the year, a little over a year, that the boycott lasted,
189
568561
3507
09:33
there were over four church bombings.
190
573298
2629
09:35
Martin Luther King's house was bombed twice.
191
575951
3004
09:39
Other civil rights leaders' houses were bombed in Birmingham.
192
579392
3473
09:43
Rosa Parks's husband slept at night with a shotgun,
193
583587
5268
09:48
because they would get constant death threats.
194
588879
2267
09:51
In fact, Rosa Parks's mother lived with them,
195
591170
2506
09:53
and sometimes she would stay on the phone for hours
196
593700
2476
09:56
so that nobody would call in with death threats,
197
596200
3160
09:59
because it was constant and persistent.
198
599384
2225
10:01
In fact, there was so much tension,
199
601633
2627
10:04
there was so much pressure, there was so much terrorism,
200
604284
2657
10:06
that Rosa Parks and her husband, they lost their jobs,
201
606965
2527
10:09
and they became unemployable
202
609516
1814
10:11
and eventually had to leave and move out of the South.
203
611354
4102
10:17
This is a civil rights reality
204
617558
2954
10:20
that Rosa Parks wanted to make sure that people understood.
205
620536
4618
10:25
So you say, "Well, David, what does that have to do with me?
206
625981
5571
10:31
I'm a well-meaning person.
207
631576
1930
10:33
I didn't own slaves.
208
633530
1534
10:35
I'm not trying to whitewash history.
209
635088
1755
10:36
I'm a good guy. I'm a good person."
210
636867
2288
10:40
Let me tell you what it has to do with you,
211
640433
2013
10:42
and I'll tell it to you by telling you a story
212
642470
2464
10:44
about a professor of mine, a white professor,
213
644958
3527
10:48
when I was in graduate school, who was a brilliant, brilliant individual.
214
648509
4365
10:52
We'll call him "Fred."
215
652898
1278
10:55
And Fred was writing this history of the civil rights movement,
216
655061
4649
10:59
but he was writing specifically about a moment
217
659734
2481
11:02
that happened to him in North Carolina
218
662239
1912
11:04
when this white man shot this black man in cold blood in a wide-open space
219
664175
4263
11:08
and was never convicted.
220
668462
1533
11:10
And so it was this great book,
221
670769
1768
11:12
and he called together a couple of his professor friends
222
672561
3712
11:16
and he called me to read a draft of it before the final submission.
223
676297
4581
11:20
And I was flattered that he called me;
224
680902
1842
11:22
I was only a graduate student then.
225
682768
1720
11:24
I was kind of feeling myself a little bit. I was like, "OK, yeah."
226
684512
3908
11:28
I'm sitting around amongst intellectuals,
227
688444
2570
11:31
and I read the draft of the book.
228
691038
4502
11:35
And there was a moment in the book
229
695564
1995
11:37
that struck me as being deeply problematic,
230
697583
2643
11:40
and so I said,
231
700250
1165
11:41
"Fred," as we were sitting around talking about this draft,
232
701439
3576
11:45
I said, "Fred, I've got a real problem with this moment that you talk
233
705039
4687
11:49
about your maid in your book."
234
709750
3218
11:52
And I could see Fred get a little "tight," as we say.
235
712992
6693
11:59
He said, "What do you mean? That's a great story.
236
719709
3763
12:03
It happened just like I said."
237
723496
1851
12:05
I said, "Mmm ... can I give you another scenario?"
238
725371
2910
12:08
Now, what's the story?
239
728950
1329
12:10
It was 1968.
240
730303
1617
12:12
Martin Luther King had just been assassinated.
241
732649
3136
12:16
His maid, "domestic" -- we'll call her "Mabel,"
242
736443
4137
12:20
was in the kitchen.
243
740604
1205
12:22
Little Fred is eight years old.
244
742706
1606
12:24
Little Fred comes into the kitchen,
245
744336
1841
12:26
and Mabel, who he has only seen as smiling and helpful and happy,
246
746968
6151
12:33
is bent over the sink,
247
753143
2282
12:35
and she's crying,
248
755449
1410
12:37
and she's sobbing
249
757896
1415
12:40
inconsolably.
250
760479
1205
12:42
And little Fred comes over to her and says, "Mabel, what is wrong?"
251
762604
4177
12:47
Mabel turns, and she says,
252
767941
2039
12:50
"They killed him! They killed our leader. They killed Martin Luther King.
253
770004
4546
12:54
He's dead! They are monsters."
254
774574
3342
12:59
And little Fred says,
255
779054
1819
13:00
"It'll be OK, Mabel. It'll be OK. It'll be OK."
256
780897
3325
13:04
And she looked at him, and she says, "No, it's not going to be OK.
257
784246
3099
13:07
Did you not hear what I just said?
258
787369
1942
13:09
They killed Martin Luther King."
259
789335
2279
13:13
And Fred,
260
793106
1981
13:15
son of a preacher,
261
795111
1373
13:17
looks up at Mabel, and he says,
262
797882
2462
13:20
"But Mabel, didn't Jesus die on the cross for our sins?
263
800368
5001
13:25
Wasn't that a good outcome?
264
805784
1542
13:27
Maybe this will be a good outcome.
265
807350
3392
13:30
Maybe the death of Martin Luther King will lead to a good outcome."
266
810766
4633
13:36
And as Fred tells the story,
267
816100
2274
13:38
he says that Mabel put her hand over her mouth,
268
818398
3742
13:43
she reached down and she gave little Fred a hug,
269
823417
2569
13:47
and then she reached into the icebox,
270
827002
2577
13:49
and took out a couple Pepsis,
271
829603
2276
13:51
gave him some Pepsis
272
831903
1456
13:53
and sent him on his way to play with his siblings.
273
833383
2845
13:56
And he said,
274
836948
1563
13:58
"This was proof that even in the most harrowing times of race struggle
275
838535
5634
14:04
that two people could come together across racial lines
276
844193
3252
14:07
and find human commonality
277
847469
2196
14:09
along the lines of love and affection."
278
849689
2670
14:12
And I said, "Fred, that is some BS."
279
852383
3845
14:16
(Laughter)
280
856252
2000
14:18
(Applause)
281
858803
1376
14:20
Fred was like,
282
860203
2952
14:23
"But I don't understand, David. That's the story."
283
863179
3573
14:26
I said, "Fred, let me ask you a question."
284
866776
2154
14:29
I said, "You were in North Carolina in 1968.
285
869732
6219
14:35
If Mabel would've went to her community -- you were eight years old --
286
875975
3305
14:39
what do you think the eight-year-old African-American children
287
879304
2918
14:42
were calling her?
288
882246
1151
14:43
Do you think they called her by her first name?"
289
883421
2247
14:45
No, they called her "Miss Mabel,"
290
885692
1580
14:47
or they called her "Miss Johnson," or they called her "Auntie Johnson."
291
887296
3404
14:50
They would have never dared call her by her first name,
292
890724
2587
14:53
because that would have been the height of disrespect.
293
893335
2532
14:55
And yet, you were calling her by her first name
294
895891
2234
14:58
every single day that she worked,
295
898149
1584
14:59
and you never thought about it."
296
899757
1928
15:01
I said, "Let me ask you another question: Was Mabel married?
297
901709
3009
15:05
Did she have children?
298
905255
1474
15:06
What church did she go to?
299
906753
1668
15:08
What was her favorite dessert?"
300
908445
2230
15:12
Fred could not answer any of those questions.
301
912754
3913
15:17
I said, "Fred, this story is not about Mabel.
302
917337
3491
15:20
This story is about you."
303
920852
1389
15:22
I said, "This story made you feel good,
304
922883
2967
15:25
but this story is not about Mabel.
305
925874
2159
15:28
The reality is,
306
928057
1594
15:29
what probably happened was, Mabel was crying,
307
929675
2554
15:32
which was not something she customarily did,
308
932253
2076
15:34
so she was letting her guard down.
309
934353
1765
15:36
And you came into the kitchen,
310
936637
1632
15:38
and you caught her at a weak moment where she was letting her guard down.
311
938293
3497
15:42
And see, because you thought of yourself as just like one of her children,
312
942278
3486
15:45
you didn't recognize that you were in fact the child of her employer.
313
945788
4682
15:50
And she'd found herself yelling at you.
314
950899
2364
15:53
And then she caught herself,
315
953287
1374
15:54
realizing that, 'If I'm yelling at him
316
954685
2372
15:57
and he goes back and he tells his dad or he tells mom,
317
957081
2577
15:59
I could lose my job.'
318
959682
2422
16:02
And so she tempered herself, and she ended up --
319
962934
2289
16:05
even though she needed consoling -- she ended up consoling you
320
965247
4598
16:09
and sending you on your way,
321
969869
1629
16:11
perhaps so she could finish mourning in peace."
322
971522
3675
16:16
And Fred was stunned.
323
976033
1265
16:17
And he realized that he had actually misread that moment.
324
977782
4020
16:22
And see, this is what they did to Rosa Parks.
325
982230
3360
16:25
Because it's a lot easier to digest an old grandmother with tired feet
326
985614
5426
16:31
who doesn't stand up because she wants to fight for inequality,
327
991064
3421
16:34
but because her feet and her back are tired,
328
994509
2291
16:36
and she's worked all day.
329
996824
1638
16:39
See, old grandmothers are not scary.
330
999269
2805
16:42
But young, radical black women
331
1002098
2152
16:44
who don't take any stuff from anybody
332
1004274
2141
16:46
are very scary,
333
1006439
1504
16:47
who stand up to power
334
1007967
1886
16:49
and are willing to die for that --
335
1009877
2064
16:51
those are not the kind of people
336
1011965
2275
16:54
that make us comfortable.
337
1014264
2760
16:59
So you say,
338
1019270
1171
17:01
"What do you want me to do, David?
339
1021258
1720
17:03
I don't know what to do."
340
1023002
3260
17:07
Well, what I would say to you is,
341
1027159
2497
17:09
there was a time in which,
342
1029680
2045
17:11
if you were Jewish, you were not white,
343
1031749
2216
17:13
if you were Italian, you were not white,
344
1033989
2008
17:16
if you were Irish, you were not white
345
1036021
1898
17:17
in this country.
346
1037943
1162
17:19
It took a while before the Irish, the Jews and the Italians became white.
347
1039129
5008
17:24
Right?
348
1044843
1171
17:26
There was a time in which you were "othered,"
349
1046038
2151
17:28
when you were the people on the outside.
350
1048213
2980
17:33
Toni Morrison said,
351
1053736
1280
17:35
"If, in order for you to be tall, I have to be on my knees,
352
1055040
3725
17:38
you have a serious problem."
353
1058789
1374
17:40
She says, "White America has a serious, serious problem."
354
1060187
3118
17:44
To be honest, I don't know if race relations will improve in America.
355
1064583
5013
17:50
But I know that if they will improve,
356
1070127
1795
17:51
we have to take these challenges on head on.
357
1071946
3958
17:56
The future of my children depends on it.
358
1076619
1994
17:58
The future of my children's children depends on it.
359
1078637
2572
18:01
And, whether you know it or not,
360
1081731
1891
18:03
the future of your children and your children's children
361
1083646
4166
18:07
depends on it, too.
362
1087836
1283
18:09
Thank you.
363
1089632
1154
18:10
(Applause)
364
1090810
1395
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7