The lie that invented racism | John Biewen

1,082,581 views ・ 2020-11-01

TED


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

00:00
Transcriber: Joseph Geni Reviewer: Camille Martínez
0
0
7000
00:13
What is up with us white people?
1
13523
3191
00:16
(Laughter)
2
16738
1626
00:19
I've been thinking about that a lot the last few years,
3
19685
2599
00:22
and I know I have company.
4
22308
1464
00:24
Look, I get it --
5
24271
1308
00:25
people of color have been asking that question for centuries.
6
25603
2986
00:29
But I think a growing number of white folks are too,
7
29335
4329
00:33
given what's been going on out there
8
33688
2993
00:36
in our country.
9
36705
1265
00:39
And notice I said, "What's up with us white people?"
10
39537
3345
00:42
because right now, I'm not talking about those white people,
11
42906
3962
00:46
the ones with the swastikas and the hoods and the tiki torches.
12
46892
3802
00:51
They are a problem and a threat.
13
51400
3089
00:54
They perpetrate most of the terrorism in our country,
14
54513
2507
00:57
as you all in Charlottesville know better than most.
15
57044
3645
01:01
But I'm talking about something bigger and more pervasive.
16
61331
3715
01:05
I'm talking about all of us,
17
65070
2286
01:07
white folks writ large.
18
67380
2000
01:09
And maybe, especially, people sort of like me,
19
69803
2879
01:12
self-described progressive,
20
72706
2578
01:15
don't want to be racist.
21
75308
1740
01:17
Good white people.
22
77883
1482
01:19
(Laughter)
23
79818
1273
01:21
Any good white people in the room?
24
81115
1907
01:23
(Laughter)
25
83046
1079
01:24
I was raised to be that sort of person.
26
84149
3559
01:27
I was a little kid in the '60s and '70s,
27
87732
2468
01:30
and to give you some sense of my parents:
28
90224
2835
01:33
actual public opinion polls at the time
29
93083
2618
01:35
showed that only a small minority, about 20 percent of white Americans,
30
95725
4917
01:40
approved and supported
31
100666
2360
01:43
Martin Luther King and his work with the civil rights movement
32
103050
3241
01:46
while Dr. King was still alive.
33
106315
2552
01:50
I'm proud to say my parents were in that group.
34
110004
2725
01:53
Race got talked about in our house.
35
113212
2817
01:56
And when the shows that dealt with race would come on the television,
36
116577
4180
02:00
they would sit us kids down, made sure we watched:
37
120781
3173
02:03
the Sidney Poitier movies, "Roots" ...
38
123978
2859
02:08
The message was loud and clear,
39
128238
1684
02:09
and I got it:
40
129946
1226
02:11
racism is wrong; racists are bad people.
41
131910
3682
02:16
At the same time,
42
136602
1396
02:18
we lived in a very white place in Minnesota.
43
138022
3137
02:21
And I'll just speak for myself,
44
141848
1606
02:23
I think that allowed me to believe that those white racists on the TV screen
45
143478
5955
02:29
were being beamed in from some other place.
46
149457
2580
02:32
It wasn't about us, really.
47
152870
2011
02:35
I did not feel implicated.
48
155580
1950
02:39
Now, I would say, I'm still in recovery from that early impression.
49
159249
3754
02:44
I got into journalism
50
164263
1671
02:45
in part because I cared about things like equality and justice.
51
165958
5383
02:52
For a long time, racism was just such a puzzle to me.
52
172563
3652
02:56
Why is it still with us when it's so clearly wrong?
53
176894
3795
03:01
Why such a persistent force?
54
181418
3103
03:05
Maybe I was puzzled because I wasn't yet looking in the right place
55
185743
3401
03:09
or asking the right questions.
56
189168
2135
03:12
Have you noticed
57
192621
1401
03:14
that when people in our mostly white media
58
194046
5462
03:19
report on what they consider to be racial issues,
59
199532
2686
03:22
what we consider to be racial issues,
60
202242
2510
03:24
what that usually means is that we're pointing our cameras
61
204776
2811
03:27
and our microphones and our gaze
62
207611
1870
03:29
at people of color,
63
209505
2008
03:31
asking questions like,
64
211537
2154
03:33
"How are Black folks or Native Americans, Latino or Asian Americans,
65
213715
4953
03:38
how are they doing?"
66
218692
2096
03:40
in a given community or with respect to some issue --
67
220812
3252
03:44
the economy, education.
68
224088
1890
03:47
I've done my share of that kind of journalism
69
227538
3926
03:51
over many years.
70
231488
1385
03:54
But then George Zimmerman killed Trayvon Martin,
71
234524
2621
03:58
followed by this unending string of high-profile police shootings
72
238621
4612
04:03
of unarmed Black people,
73
243257
1719
04:05
the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement,
74
245000
2521
04:07
Dylann Roof and the Charleston massacre,
75
247545
3063
04:10
#OscarsSoWhite --
76
250632
1654
04:13
all the incidents from the day-to-day of American life,
77
253334
5121
04:18
these overtly racist incidents
78
258479
1725
04:20
that we now get to see because they're captured on smartphones
79
260228
2923
04:23
and sent across the internet.
80
263175
1682
04:26
And beneath those visible events,
81
266019
2656
04:28
the stubborn data,
82
268699
1704
04:30
the studies showing systemic racism in every institution we have:
83
270427
4375
04:35
housing segregation, job discrimination,
84
275692
3255
04:38
the deeply racialized inequities in our schools
85
278971
2811
04:41
and criminal justice system.
86
281806
1800
04:44
And what really did it for me,
87
284718
1567
04:46
and I know I'm not alone in this, either:
88
286309
1977
04:49
the rise of Donald Trump
89
289377
1979
04:51
and the discovery that a solid majority of white Americans
90
291380
5431
04:56
would embrace or at least accept
91
296835
3069
04:59
such a raw, bitter kind of white identity politics.
92
299928
4586
05:07
This was all disturbing to me as a human being.
93
307405
2819
05:10
As a journalist, I found myself turning the lens around,
94
310778
5530
05:16
thinking,
95
316332
1720
05:18
"Wow, white folks are the story.
96
318076
2766
05:20
Whiteness is a story,"
97
320866
2451
05:24
And also thinking, "Can I do that?
98
324562
2970
05:28
What would a podcast series about whiteness sound like?"
99
328208
3205
05:31
(Laughter)
100
331437
1402
05:32
"And oh, by the way -- this could get uncomfortable."
101
332863
2833
05:38
I had seen almost no journalism that looked deeply at whiteness,
102
338402
4936
05:43
but, of course, people of color and especially Black intellectuals
103
343362
3958
05:47
have made sharp critiques of white supremacist culture
104
347344
2644
05:50
for centuries,
105
350012
1451
05:51
and I knew that in the last two or three decades,
106
351487
2348
05:53
scholars had done interesting work
107
353859
2579
05:56
looking at race through the frame of whiteness,
108
356462
3493
05:59
what it is, how we got it, how it works in the world.
109
359979
3504
06:05
I started reading,
110
365030
1843
06:06
and I reached out to some leading experts on race and the history of race.
111
366897
4883
06:13
One of the first questions I asked was,
112
373748
2450
06:16
"Where did this idea of being a white person
113
376222
3643
06:19
come from in the first place?"
114
379889
1649
06:22
Science is clear.
115
382592
2392
06:25
We are one human race.
116
385008
2144
06:27
We're all related,
117
387730
1243
06:28
all descended from a common ancestor in Africa.
118
388997
2846
06:32
Some people walked out of Africa into colder, darker places
119
392772
3745
06:36
and lost a lot of their melanin,
120
396541
2552
06:39
some of us more than others.
121
399117
1745
06:40
(Laughter)
122
400886
1229
06:43
But genetically, we are all 99.9 percent the same.
123
403037
5096
06:48
There's more genetic diversity within what we call racial groups
124
408157
5202
06:53
than there is between racial groups.
125
413383
2629
06:56
There's no gene for whiteness or blackness or Asian-ness
126
416036
3947
07:00
or what have you.
127
420007
1433
07:02
So how did this happen?
128
422411
1995
07:04
How did we get this thing?
129
424430
1953
07:06
How did racism start?
130
426407
2090
07:09
I think if you had asked me to speculate on that,
131
429797
3506
07:13
in my ignorance, some years ago,
132
433327
3022
07:16
I probably would have said,
133
436373
1918
07:18
"Well, I guess somewhere back in deep history,
134
438315
4615
07:22
people encountered one another,
135
442954
1966
07:24
and they found each other strange.
136
444944
2358
07:27
'Your skin is a different color, your hair is different,
137
447326
2645
07:29
you dress funny.
138
449995
1538
07:31
I guess I'll just go ahead and jump to the conclusion
139
451557
2563
07:34
that since you're different
140
454144
1304
07:35
that you're somehow less than me,
141
455472
2125
07:37
and maybe that makes it OK for me to mistreat you.'"
142
457621
3088
07:41
Right?
143
461284
1154
07:42
Is that something like what we imagine or assume?
144
462462
3341
07:46
And under that kind of scenario,
145
466613
1604
07:48
it's all a big, tragic misunderstanding.
146
468241
3359
07:53
But it seems that's wrong.
147
473334
2110
07:56
First of all, race is a recent invention.
148
476397
2861
07:59
It's just a few hundred years old.
149
479282
1802
08:01
Before that, yes, people divided themselves
150
481892
3629
08:05
by religion, tribal group, language,
151
485545
3894
08:09
things like that.
152
489463
1172
08:10
But for most of human history,
153
490659
1444
08:12
people had no notion of race.
154
492127
2342
08:15
In Ancient Greece, for example --
155
495665
1665
08:17
and I learned this from the historian Nell Irvin Painter --
156
497354
3787
08:21
the Greeks thought they were better than the other people they knew about,
157
501165
4419
08:25
but not because of some idea that they were innately superior.
158
505608
3920
08:29
They just thought that they'd developed the most advanced culture.
159
509552
3923
08:34
So they looked around at the Ethiopians,
160
514369
3352
08:37
but also the Persians and the Celts,
161
517745
2096
08:39
and they said, "They're all kind of barbaric compared to us.
162
519865
2942
08:43
Culturally, they're just not Greek."
163
523477
3057
08:47
And yes, in the ancient world, there was lots of slavery,
164
527938
4001
08:51
but people enslaved people who didn't look like them,
165
531963
2785
08:54
and they often enslaved people who did.
166
534772
2366
08:57
Did you know that the English word "slave" is derived from the word "Slav"?
167
537686
5295
09:03
Because Slavic people were enslaved by all kinds of folks,
168
543922
4014
09:07
including Western Europeans,
169
547960
1687
09:09
for centuries.
170
549671
2382
09:12
Slavery wasn't about race either,
171
552680
2158
09:14
because no one had thought up race yet.
172
554862
3130
09:19
So who did?
173
559421
1254
09:21
I put that question to another leading historian,
174
561404
3214
09:24
Ibram Kendi.
175
564642
1445
09:26
I didn't expect he would answer the question
176
566555
2296
09:28
in the form of one person's name and a date,
177
568875
2539
09:31
as if we were talking about the light bulb.
178
571438
2108
09:33
(Laughter)
179
573570
1046
09:35
But he did.
180
575037
1282
09:36
(Laughter)
181
576343
1656
09:38
He said, in his exhaustive research,
182
578519
2488
09:41
he found what he believed to be the first articulation of racist ideas.
183
581031
4345
09:45
And he named the culprit.
184
585970
2031
09:48
This guy should be more famous,
185
588025
1485
09:49
or infamous.
186
589534
1186
09:50
His name is Gomes de Zurara.
187
590744
2480
09:53
Portuguese man.
188
593993
1179
09:55
Wrote a book in the 1450s
189
595196
2906
09:58
in which he did something that no one had ever done before,
190
598126
2807
10:00
according to Dr. Kendi.
191
600957
1356
10:02
He lumped together all the people of Africa --
192
602892
3516
10:06
a vast, diverse continent --
193
606432
1856
10:09
and he described them as a distinct group,
194
609407
3092
10:12
inferior and beastly.
195
612523
2476
10:16
Never mind that in that precolonial time
196
616391
2379
10:18
some of the most sophisticated cultures in the world were in Africa.
197
618794
3952
10:24
Why would this guy make this claim?
198
624176
3267
10:28
Turns out, it helps to follow the money.
199
628779
2323
10:31
First of all, Zurara was hired to write that book
200
631859
2944
10:34
by the Portuguese king,
201
634827
2255
10:37
and just a few years before,
202
637106
1840
10:38
slave traders --
203
638970
2105
10:41
here we go --
204
641099
1307
10:42
slave traders tied to the Portuguese crown
205
642430
2769
10:46
had effectively pioneered the Atlantic slave trade.
206
646133
3353
10:49
They were the first Europeans to sail directly to sub-Saharan Africa
207
649510
4023
10:53
to kidnap and enslave African people.
208
653557
2648
10:57
So it was suddenly really helpful
209
657041
2485
10:59
to have a story about the inferiority of African people
210
659550
4502
11:04
to justify this new trade
211
664076
2031
11:07
to other people, to the church,
212
667206
1670
11:08
to themselves.
213
668900
1599
11:12
And with the stroke of a pen,
214
672096
2444
11:14
Zurara invented both blackness and whiteness,
215
674564
2946
11:17
because he basically created the notion of blackness
216
677534
4142
11:21
through this description of Africans,
217
681700
3040
11:24
and as Dr. Kendi says,
218
684764
2431
11:27
blackness has no meaning without whiteness.
219
687219
2727
11:30
Other European countries followed the Portuguese lead
220
690727
4224
11:36
in looking to Africa for human property and free labor
221
696059
4285
11:40
and in adopting this fiction
222
700368
2927
11:43
about the inferiority of African people.
223
703319
2540
11:47
I found this clarifying.
224
707552
2259
11:51
Racism didn't start with a misunderstanding,
225
711221
2176
11:53
it started with a lie.
226
713421
1670
11:57
Meanwhile, over here in colonial America,
227
717107
2718
11:59
the people now calling themselves white got busy taking these racist ideas
228
719849
6305
12:06
and turning them into law,
229
726178
1313
12:08
laws that stripped all human rights from the people they were calling Black
230
728866
6008
12:14
and locking them into our particularly vicious brand of chattel slavery,
231
734898
4492
12:19
and laws that gave even the poorest white people benefits,
232
739414
4359
12:23
not big benefits in material terms
233
743797
3519
12:27
but the right to not be enslaved for life,
234
747340
2389
12:30
the right to not have your loved ones torn from your arms and sold,
235
750777
3977
12:34
and sometimes real goodies.
236
754778
2347
12:37
The handouts of free land in places like Virginia
237
757149
4935
12:42
to white people only
238
762108
1690
12:43
started long before the American Revolution
239
763822
3988
12:47
and continued long after.
240
767834
1865
12:52
Now, I can imagine
241
772026
2268
12:54
there would be people listening to me -- if they're still listening --
242
774318
4348
12:58
who might be thinking,
243
778690
1380
13:00
"Come on, this is all ancient history. Why does this matter?
244
780094
4362
13:04
Things have changed.
245
784480
1263
13:05
Can't we just get over it and move on?"
246
785767
2214
13:08
Right?
247
788905
1151
13:10
But I would argue, for me certainly,
248
790421
3419
13:14
learning this history has brought a real shift
249
794896
2215
13:17
in the way that I understand racism today.
250
797135
2432
13:20
To review, two quick takeaways from what I've said so far:
251
800932
3480
13:24
one, race is not a thing biologically,
252
804436
3476
13:27
it's a story some people decided to tell;
253
807936
3596
13:31
and two, people told that story
254
811556
1958
13:33
to justify the brutal exploitation of other human beings for profit.
255
813538
5669
13:40
I didn't learn those two facts in school.
256
820379
2021
13:42
I suspect most of us didn't.
257
822424
1768
13:44
If you did, you had a special teacher.
258
824216
2516
13:47
Right?
259
827324
1151
13:48
But once they sink in,
260
828499
1179
13:50
for one thing, it becomes clear
261
830845
2701
13:53
that racism is not mainly a problem of attitudes,
262
833570
3979
13:57
of individual bigotry.
263
837573
1724
14:00
No, it's a tool.
264
840630
1906
14:02
It's a tool to divide us and to prop up systems --
265
842560
4231
14:06
economic, political and social systems
266
846815
2788
14:09
that advantage some people and disadvantage others.
267
849627
3157
14:13
And it's a tool to convince a lot of white folks
268
853510
2252
14:15
who may or may not be getting a great deal out of our highly stratified society
269
855786
6188
14:21
to support the status quo.
270
861998
1931
14:24
"Could be worse. At least I'm white."
271
864971
2072
14:29
Once I grasped the origins of racism,
272
869575
3363
14:32
I stopped being mystified by the fact that it's still with us.
273
872962
3934
14:38
I guess, you know, looking back,
274
878249
1570
14:39
I thought about racism as being sort of like the flat Earth --
275
879843
3845
14:43
just bad, outdated thinking that would fade away on its own
276
883712
2996
14:46
before long.
277
886732
1234
14:49
But no, this tool of whiteness
278
889962
1920
14:51
is still doing the job it was invented to do.
279
891906
2845
14:55
Powerful people go to work every day,
280
895305
2301
14:57
leveraging and reinforcing this old weapon
281
897630
4265
15:01
in the halls of power,
282
901919
1905
15:03
in some broadcast studios we could mention ...
283
903848
2679
15:07
And we don't need to fuss over
284
907596
1455
15:09
whether these people believe what they're saying,
285
909075
2366
15:11
whether they're really racist.
286
911465
1935
15:13
That's not what it's about.
287
913913
1630
15:15
It's about pocketbooks and power.
288
915567
3226
15:21
Finally, I think the biggest lesson of all --
289
921032
3833
15:24
and let me talk in particular to the white folks for a minute:
290
924889
4026
15:31
once we understand that people who look like us
291
931192
3155
15:34
invented the very notion of race
292
934371
2694
15:38
in order to advantage themselves and us,
293
938415
3099
15:41
isn't it easier to see that it's our problem to solve?
294
941538
3780
15:46
It's a white people problem.
295
946297
1800
15:48
I'm embarrassed to say that for a long time,
296
948970
2201
15:51
I thought of racism as being mainly a struggle for people of color to fight,
297
951195
5186
15:56
sort of like the people on the TV screen when I was a kid.
298
956405
2961
16:00
Or, as if I was on the sidelines at a sports contest,
299
960620
4143
16:04
on one side people of color,
300
964787
1790
16:06
on the other those real racists,
301
966601
2840
16:09
the Southern sheriff,
302
969465
1351
16:10
the people in hoods.
303
970840
1262
16:12
And I was sincerely rooting for people of color to win the struggle.
304
972643
3354
16:17
But no.
305
977407
1478
16:18
There are no sidelines.
306
978909
1894
16:21
We're all in it.
307
981555
1314
16:23
We are implicated.
308
983249
1723
16:26
And if I'm not joining the struggle to dismantle a system
309
986116
2905
16:29
that advantages me,
310
989045
2319
16:31
I am complicit.
311
991388
1454
16:34
This isn't about shame or guilt.
312
994685
2084
16:37
White guilt doesn't get anything done,
313
997408
2028
16:39
and honestly, I don't feel a lot of guilt.
314
999460
3219
16:42
History isn't my fault or yours.
315
1002703
2899
16:46
What I do feel is a stronger sense of responsibility
316
1006407
3722
16:51
to do something.
317
1011453
1358
16:54
All this has altered the way that I think about and approach my work
318
1014605
4557
16:59
as a documentary storyteller
319
1019186
2206
17:01
and as a teacher.
320
1021416
1278
17:03
But beyond that, besides that, what does it mean?
321
1023559
2390
17:05
What does it mean for any of us?
322
1025973
1777
17:08
Does it mean that we support leaders
323
1028986
2733
17:11
who want to push ahead with a conversation about reparations?
324
1031743
3112
17:15
In our communities,
325
1035675
1164
17:16
are we finding people who are working to transform unjust institutions
326
1036863
5020
17:21
and supporting that work?
327
1041907
1537
17:24
At my job,
328
1044313
1452
17:25
am I the white person who shows up grudgingly
329
1045789
2346
17:28
for the diversity and equity meeting,
330
1048159
2821
17:31
or am I trying to figure out how to be a real accomplice
331
1051004
2752
17:33
to my colleagues of color?
332
1053780
1711
17:36
Seems to me wherever we show up,
333
1056694
2556
17:40
we need to show up with humility and vulnerability
334
1060270
4355
17:44
and a willingness to put down this power that we did not earn.
335
1064649
4435
17:52
I believe we also stand to benefit
336
1072876
2813
17:55
if we could create a society
337
1075713
2110
17:57
that's not built on the exploitation or oppression of anyone.
338
1077847
3752
18:02
But in the end we should do this,
339
1082683
3154
18:05
we should show up,
340
1085861
1304
18:07
figure out how to take action.
341
1087189
1811
18:10
Because it's right.
342
1090103
1566
18:14
Thank you.
343
1094248
1209
18:15
(Applause)
344
1095481
2716
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