So my
colleague and I were catching up after not seeing each other for a while. She’s just accepted a new position as an administrator
at the community college up the street from where I work. I wanted to welcome her to the neighborhood
and welcome her to her new job. We
arranged to meet at a Starbucks in between our two institutions. We talked for maybe 30 or 40 minutes. It’s the kind of innocuous catch-up talk that
two college administrators do when we’re trying to figure out what we’ve been
up to since we last talked.
My awareness
of the incident, as I later explained it to the officer who took my statement,
started with me realizing that my right hand was wet. We were in a Starbucks and there was lots of
liquid around. My cortical brain told me
that most likely someone spilled something.
But then, I heard someone behind me say something that sounded like,
“fucking nigger bitch.” My brain needed
a new explanation. I turned and realized
that a young White man in his early 20s behind me, neatly dressed with
short-cropped hair with a dark-colored backpack, was directing this statement
to my colleague. As I turned further to face him, he said, “That’s right fucking
nigger bitch” again. He walked to the
door and walked out. The incident didn’t
really register with me, even as he walked out.
What had happened? I turned to my
colleague and asked if she knew the young man.
She had never seen him. He went
outside and stood at the window yelling more comments that we could not hear
and finally walked away down the street.
It was as he stood at the window that my brain started to make sense of
things, as I realized that the liquid I initially felt on my hand was his
spit. He had spit at my colleague, as it
turned out, twice. This young man looked
like a thousand other young college students I’ve seen over the years. Clean cut, well dressed. He was also visibly angry. He did not present as mentally disturbed or
under the influence of any substances.
He directed his anger at my colleague, having never met either of
us. He saw two African Americans sitting
in a Starbucks and decided that it was okay to assault us.
As my
colleague noted as we waited to file a police report, we both know that we
can’t dress ourselves out of the perception of who were are in the dominant
society. She and I, dressed in the kind
of professional attire anyone would expect a college administrator to be
wearing in the middle of a work day, are still targets for hate. The young man didn’t see educated college administrators
sitting at the table. He saw two Black
people and, in his twisted sense of the rules of life, our socio-economic
status, educational accomplishments, or our age required no respect or
deference. In fact, he seemed only to
see a woman of color whom he could brazenly assault in an open space with
others watching. It reminded me of my
childhood growing up in the 1950’s and 1960s in an all-White community where my
family endured these kinds of threats daily.
That was then, right? We all seem
to perceive that we’ve changed now.
After all, as that thinking goes, we’re in a post-racial world where
what really matters is status and access to resources and power.
The access
and status that both my colleague and I have obtained didn’t stop this
incident. While the society has created
hate crime laws and has professed an expectation that this kind of behavior
shouldn’t be tolerated, clearly for this young man those weren’t enough discouragements
to overcome whatever misogynistic and racial hatred and ignorance fuel
him. And, on reflection a few hours
after the incident, more than that young man’s actions were disturbing to
me. This was a very public act in a very
small space. Everyone at that café heard
the incident and many saw it. However,
only one patron came up after the incident.
That woman apologized to us, saying that this should never happen to
anyone, and she offered to be a witness.
Also, the manager came to assist us to clean ourselves and to help file the
police report. Everyone else at the café
sat silently or went on with their business.
In a truly post-racial world, that would not be how things work. In a post-racial world, that kind of
violation would mobilize every person in that space to actively resist an
assault on two people – an assault that only happened because of our race, and
because of the gender of my colleague.
In a post-racial world, there’s no silence. Even if you can’t directly act, you take a
stand to support those who are assaulted, like the woman who volunteered to be
a witness, or the manager who took action.
That personal action is the only way that we stop gender-based and racially
motivated hate crimes. And it’s the only
way to ensure that people like this young man get the message that we as a
society won’t accept any assault on any person.
My guess is that the next time, this young man will be more violent and his
next incident will be more brash.
Unstopped, antisocial behavior like this escalates. And he lives in a world right now where he
felt safe taking these actions. But when
incidents like this stop, or people who witness these incidents involve
themselves as actors against such acts, then maybe we’ll be moving toward a
post-racial world.
Note Added 6/5/16:
Until this date, I encouraged people to post replies and I would moderate and allow those replies to appear here. When Seattle NPR station KUOW re-posted this three days ago, I'm told they received 33,000 hits in the first day, and that drove a significant number of readers to this site. And many of those readers sent replies -- more responses than I can keep up with. So I've kept the replies that were online before the deluge of messages, and I have turned off the reply feature to this posting. I apologize to people who have sent messages; however, it's impossible for me to moderate and post all of them. I encourage those of you who've sent replies that weren't posted to engage in this discussion in other forums. BH
Note Added 6/11/16
In the past week, KUOW interviewed my colleague, Yoshiko Harden, and me about this incident. KUOW's Web editor also posted a follow up article where others tell their stories. The interview and the posting of others' stories are at this link:
http://kuow.org/post/9-heartbreaking-responses-man-shouts-racial-slurs-seattle-starbucks. BH
Note Added 6/5/16:
Until this date, I encouraged people to post replies and I would moderate and allow those replies to appear here. When Seattle NPR station KUOW re-posted this three days ago, I'm told they received 33,000 hits in the first day, and that drove a significant number of readers to this site. And many of those readers sent replies -- more responses than I can keep up with. So I've kept the replies that were online before the deluge of messages, and I have turned off the reply feature to this posting. I apologize to people who have sent messages; however, it's impossible for me to moderate and post all of them. I encourage those of you who've sent replies that weren't posted to engage in this discussion in other forums. BH
Note Added 6/11/16
In the past week, KUOW interviewed my colleague, Yoshiko Harden, and me about this incident. KUOW's Web editor also posted a follow up article where others tell their stories. The interview and the posting of others' stories are at this link:
http://kuow.org/post/9-heartbreaking-responses-man-shouts-racial-slurs-seattle-starbucks. BH