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

112,311 views

2020-02-26 ・ TED


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

112,311 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,
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Elijah, 15, and Octavia, 12.
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When Elijah was in the fourth grade,
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he came to me,
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came home from school bubbling over with excitement
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about what he had learned that day about African-American history.
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Now, I'm an African-American and cultural studies professor,
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and so, as you can imagine,
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African-American culture is kind of serious around my home.
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So I was very proud that my son was excited about what he had learned
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that day in school.
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So I said, "What did you learn?"
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He said, "I learned about Rosa Parks."
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I said, "OK, what did you learn about Rosa Parks?"
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He said, "I learned that Rosa Parks was this frail, old black woman
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in the 1950s
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in Montgomery, Alabama.
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And she sat down on this bus,
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and she had tired feet,
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and when the bus driver told her to give up her seat to a white patron,
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she refused because she had tired feet.
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It had been a long day,
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and she was tired of oppression,
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and she didn't give up her seat.
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And she marched with Martin Luther King,
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and she believed in nonviolence."
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And I guess he must have looked at my face
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and saw that I was a little less than impressed
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by his
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... um ...
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history lesson.
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And so he stopped, and he was like, "Dad, what's wrong? What did I get wrong?"
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I said, "Son, you didn't get anything wrong,
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but I think your teacher got a whole lot of things wrong."
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(Laughter)
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He said, "Well, what do you mean?"
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I said, "Rosa Parks was not tired.
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She was not old.
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And she certainly didn't have tired feet."
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He said, "What?"
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I said, "Yes!
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Rosa Parks was only 42 years old" --
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Yeah, you're shocked, right? Never heard that.
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"Rosa Parks was only 42 years old,
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she had only worked six hours that day, and she was a seamstress
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and her feet were just fine.
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(Laughter)
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The only thing that she was tired of
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was she was tired of inequality.
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She was tired of oppression."
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And my son said,
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"Well, why would my teacher tell me this thing?
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This is confusing for me."
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Because he loved his teacher, and she was a good teacher,
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a young-ish, 20-something white woman,
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really, really smart, pushed him, so I liked her as well.
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But he was confused. "Why would she tell me this?" he said.
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He said, "Dad, tell me more. Tell me more. Tell me more about Rosa Parks."
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And I said, "Son, I'll do you one better."
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He was like, "What?"
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I said, "I'm going to buy her autobiography,
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and I'm going to let you read it yourself."
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(Laughter)
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So as you can imagine,
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Elijah wasn't too excited about this new, lengthy homework assignment
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that his dad had just given him, but he took it in stride.
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And he came back after he had read it,
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and he was excited about what he had learned.
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He said, "Dad, not only was Rosa Parks not initially into nonviolence,
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but Rosa Parks's grandfather, who basically raised her
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and was light enough to pass as white,
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used to walk around town with his gun in his holster,
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and people knew if you messed with Mr. Parks's children or grandchildren,
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he would put a cap in your proverbial bottom."
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(Laughter)
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Right?
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He was not someone to mess with.
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And he said, "I also learned that Rosa Parks married a man in Raymond
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who was a lot like her grandfather."
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He would organize.
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He was a civil rights activist.
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He would organize events
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and sometimes the events would be at Rosa Parks's home.
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And one time Rosa Parks remarked
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that there were so many guns on the table,
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because they were prepared for somebody to come busting into the door
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that they were prepared for whatever was going to go down,
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that Rosa Parks said, "There were so many guns on the table
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that I forgot to even offer them coffee or food."
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This is who Rosa Parks was.
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And in fact, Rosa Parks, when she was sitting on that bus that day,
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waiting for those police officers to arrive
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and not knowing what was going to happen to her,
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she was not thinking about Martin Luther King,
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who she barely knew.
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She was not thinking about nonviolence or Gandhi.
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She was thinking about her grandfather,
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a gun-toting, take-no-mess grandfather.
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That's who Rosa Parks was thinking about.
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My son was mesmerized by Rosa Parks,
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and I was proud of him to see this excitement.
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But then I still had a problem.
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Because I still had to go his school
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and address the issue with his teacher,
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because I didn't want her to continue to teach the kids
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obviously false history.
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So I'm agonizing over this,
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primarily because I understand, as an African-American man,
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that whenever you talk to whites about racism
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or anything that's racially sensitive,
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there's usually going to be a challenge.
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This is what white sociologist Robin DiAngelo calls "white fragility."
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She argues that, in fact,
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because whites have so little experience being challenged
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about their white privilege
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that whenever even the most minute challenge is brought before them,
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they usually cry,
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get angry
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or run.
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(Laughter)
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And I have experienced them all.
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And so, when I was contemplating confronting his teacher,
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I wasn't happy about it,
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but I was like, this is a necessary evil
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of being a black parent trying to raise self-actualized black children.
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So I called Elijah to me and said,
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"Elijah, I'm going to set up an appointment with your teacher
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and try and correct this
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and maybe your principal.
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What do you think?"
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And Elijah said,
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"Dad, I have a better idea."
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And I said, "Really? What's your idea?"
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He said, "We have a public speaking assignment,
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and why don't I use that public speaking assignment
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to talk about debunking the myths of Rosa Parks?"
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And I was like,
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"Well, that is a good idea."
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So Elijah goes to school,
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he does his presentation,
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he comes back home,
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and I could see something positive happened.
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I said, "Well, what happened, son?"
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He said, "Well, later on in that day,
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the teacher pulled me aside,
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and she apologized to me for giving that misinformation."
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And then something else miraculous happened the next day.
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She actually taught a new lesson on Rosa Parks,
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filling in the gaps that she had left and correcting the mistakes that she made.
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And I was so, so proud of my son.
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But then I thought about it.
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And I got angry.
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And I got real angry.
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Why? Why would I get angry?
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Because my nine-year-old son had to educate his teacher
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about his history,
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had to educate his teacher about his own humanity.
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He's nine years old.
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He should be thinking about basketball or soccer
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or the latest movie.
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He should not be thinking about having to take the responsibility
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of educating his teacher,
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his students,
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about himself, about his history.
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That was a burden that I carried.
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That was a burden that my parents carried
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and generations before them carried.
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And now I was seeing my son take on that burden, too.
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You see, that's why Rosa Parks wrote her autobiography.
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Because during her lifetime,
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if you can imagine,
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you do this amazing thing,
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you're alive and you're talking about your civil rights activism,
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and a story emerges
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in which somebody is telling the world
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that you were old and you had tired feet
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and you just were an accidental activist,
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not that you had been activist by then for 20 years,
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not that the boycott had been planned for months,
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not that you were not even the first or the second or even the third woman
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to be arrested for doing that.
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You become an accidental activist, even in her own lifetime.
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So she wrote that autobiography to correct the record,
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because what she wanted to remind people of
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was that this
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is what it was like
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in the 1950s
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trying to be black in America
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and fight for your rights.
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During the year, a little over a year, that the boycott lasted,
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there were over four church bombings.
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Martin Luther King's house was bombed twice.
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Other civil rights leaders' houses were bombed in Birmingham.
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Rosa Parks's husband slept at night with a shotgun,
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because they would get constant death threats.
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In fact, Rosa Parks's mother lived with them,
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and sometimes she would stay on the phone for hours
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so that nobody would call in with death threats,
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because it was constant and persistent.
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In fact, there was so much tension,
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there was so much pressure, there was so much terrorism,
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that Rosa Parks and her husband, they lost their jobs,
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and they became unemployable
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and eventually had to leave and move out of the South.
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This is a civil rights reality
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that Rosa Parks wanted to make sure that people understood.
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So you say, "Well, David, what does that have to do with me?
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I'm a well-meaning person.
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I didn't own slaves.
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I'm not trying to whitewash history.
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I'm a good guy. I'm a good person."
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Let me tell you what it has to do with you,
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and I'll tell it to you by telling you a story
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about a professor of mine, a white professor,
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when I was in graduate school, who was a brilliant, brilliant individual.
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We'll call him "Fred."
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And Fred was writing this history of the civil rights movement,
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but he was writing specifically about a moment
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that happened to him in North Carolina
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when this white man shot this black man in cold blood in a wide-open space
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and was never convicted.
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And so it was this great book,
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and he called together a couple of his professor friends
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and he called me to read a draft of it before the final submission.
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And I was flattered that he called me;
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I was only a graduate student then.
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I was kind of feeling myself a little bit. I was like, "OK, yeah."
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I'm sitting around amongst intellectuals,
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and I read the draft of the book.
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And there was a moment in the book
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that struck me as being deeply problematic,
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and so I said,
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"Fred," as we were sitting around talking about this draft,
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I said, "Fred, I've got a real problem with this moment that you talk
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about your maid in your book."
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And I could see Fred get a little "tight," as we say.
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He said, "What do you mean? That's a great story.
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It happened just like I said."
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I said, "Mmm ... can I give you another scenario?"
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Now, what's the story?
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It was 1968.
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Martin Luther King had just been assassinated.
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His maid, "domestic" -- we'll call her "Mabel,"
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was in the kitchen.
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Little Fred is eight years old.
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Little Fred comes into the kitchen,
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and Mabel, who he has only seen as smiling and helpful and happy,
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is bent over the sink,
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and she's crying,
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and she's sobbing
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inconsolably.
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And little Fred comes over to her and says, "Mabel, what is wrong?"
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Mabel turns, and she says,
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"They killed him! They killed our leader. They killed Martin Luther King.
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He's dead! They are monsters."
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And little Fred says,
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"It'll be OK, Mabel. It'll be OK. It'll be OK."
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And she looked at him, and she says, "No, it's not going to be OK.
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Did you not hear what I just said?
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They killed Martin Luther King."
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And Fred,
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son of a preacher,
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looks up at Mabel, and he says,
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"But Mabel, didn't Jesus die on the cross for our sins?
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Wasn't that a good outcome?
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Maybe this will be a good outcome.
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Maybe the death of Martin Luther King will lead to a good outcome."
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And as Fred tells the story,
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he says that Mabel put her hand over her mouth,
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she reached down and she gave little Fred a hug,
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and then she reached into the icebox,
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and took out a couple Pepsis,
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gave him some Pepsis
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and sent him on his way to play with his siblings.
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And he said,
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"This was proof that even in the most harrowing times of race struggle
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that two people could come together across racial lines
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and find human commonality
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along the lines of love and affection."
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And I said, "Fred, that is some BS."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Fred was like,
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"But I don't understand, David. That's the story."
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I said, "Fred, let me ask you a question."
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I said, "You were in North Carolina in 1968.
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If Mabel would've went to her community -- you were eight years old --
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what do you think the eight-year-old African-American children
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were calling her?
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Do you think they called her by her first name?"
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No, they called her "Miss Mabel,"
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or they called her "Miss Johnson," or they called her "Auntie Johnson."
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They would have never dared call her by her first name,
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because that would have been the height of disrespect.
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And yet, you were calling her by her first name
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every single day that she worked,
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and you never thought about it."
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I said, "Let me ask you another question: Was Mabel married?
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Did she have children?
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What church did she go to?
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What was her favorite dessert?"
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Fred could not answer any of those questions.
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I said, "Fred, this story is not about Mabel.
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This story is about you."
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I said, "This story made you feel good,
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but this story is not about Mabel.
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The reality is,
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what probably happened was, Mabel was crying,
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which was not something she customarily did,
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so she was letting her guard down.
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And you came into the kitchen,
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and you caught her at a weak moment where she was letting her guard down.
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And see, because you thought of yourself as just like one of her children,
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you didn't recognize that you were in fact the child of her employer.
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And she'd found herself yelling at you.
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15:53
And then she caught herself,
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15:54
realizing that, 'If I'm yelling at him
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15:57
and he goes back and he tells his dad or he tells mom,
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15:59
I could lose my job.'
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And so she tempered herself, and she ended up --
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even though she needed consoling -- she ended up consoling you
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and sending you on your way,
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perhaps so she could finish mourning in peace."
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And Fred was stunned.
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And he realized that he had actually misread that moment.
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16:22
And see, this is what they did to Rosa Parks.
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Because it's a lot easier to digest an old grandmother with tired feet
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16:31
who doesn't stand up because she wants to fight for inequality,
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16:34
but because her feet and her back are tired,
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16:36
and she's worked all day.
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16:39
See, old grandmothers are not scary.
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16:42
But young, radical black women
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who don't take any stuff from anybody
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are very scary,
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who stand up to power
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and are willing to die for that --
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those are not the kind of people
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that make us comfortable.
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16:59
So you say,
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"What do you want me to do, David?
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17:03
I don't know what to do."
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17:07
Well, what I would say to you is,
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17:09
there was a time in which,
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17:11
if you were Jewish, you were not white,
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17:13
if you were Italian, you were not white,
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17:16
if you were Irish, you were not white
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in this country.
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17:19
It took a while before the Irish, the Jews and the Italians became white.
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17:24
Right?
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17:26
There was a time in which you were "othered,"
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17:28
when you were the people on the outside.
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17:33
Toni Morrison said,
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17:35
"If, in order for you to be tall, I have to be on my knees,
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17:38
you have a serious problem."
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17:40
She says, "White America has a serious, serious problem."
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17:44
To be honest, I don't know if race relations will improve in America.
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17:50
But I know that if they will improve,
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17:51
we have to take these challenges on head on.
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17:56
The future of my children depends on it.
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17:58
The future of my children's children depends on it.
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18:01
And, whether you know it or not,
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18:03
the future of your children and your children's children
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depends on it, too.
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Thank you.
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18:10
(Applause)
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1395
About this website

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