Sunday 7 June 2020

30 DAYS WILD : THINKING WHILE WALKING - BLACK LIVES MATTER

Warley Moor Drain.
Warley Drain
Thinking while walking . . .

One of the challenging things about being on Twitter is that you get to know about events before they appear on the news. People caught up in wars tell us they are being bombed. People we've never met die; we grieve. Photos appear of forest fires, landslips, oil spills. We often know little of the context. We don't know how to judge the truth. Old news turns up as if it's only just happened. And sometimes there's silence in the media about things we 'know' and we don't know why that silence persists. Sometimes it's lonely. Sometimes it's bewildering.

It was on Twitter I first saw the video clip of George Floyd being murdered, before I had any context for it. Most of his body was concealed by the police car. A worried looking policeman was acting as a sort of intermediary between concerned members of the public and his colleague who was nonchalantly kneeling on Mr Floyd's neck. Immediately I wondered what I would have done if I had been there. Would I have said something? Done something? Intervened in some way? I didn't know what had been happening immediately before the clip began. Had the man on the ground been incredibly violent? Was he exceptionally strong? What would happen if the policeman removed his knee? It was in another country, another culture. Even those present seemed to be floundering. Later, another clip showed there were two more policemen kneeling beside his body, hidden by the vehicle. And, it turns out, he was handcuffed. He was well and truly overpowered. I see it over and over again in my bewilderment and feel complicit because I have no idea what I would have done, what I would have been able to do, had I been there.

Single, pink floxglove flower opening.
Single, pink flox-glove flower opening.
I am English. I am white. I am very English. Very white. By the names in my family tree it seems there may have been some Welsh ancestors. When I was a child, the possibility seemed exotic. I think my grandparents had relations in Scotland but I don't know how closely I was connected to them. That's the limit to my non-Englishness! Of my friends and acquaintances I find it hard to think of anyone more culturally narrow. I am university educated. I drink lots of tea. I enjoy eating crumpets with butter on. I have a non-posh but middle-class English voice without a regional accent. Feel free to think of me in stereotypes. Some of them will probably fit! I have experienced housing insecurity (terrifying) but have only twice found myself without shelter by nightfall and that was when I missed train connections. There's always been a job or a friend to go to. I have been short of money. Even within this last year there was a period when I could only afford to eat oats for breakfast and potatoes with onions for my evening meal. But that was ok. I would shake at night and wander round the house worried because I was so poor and so ill but I like oats and I like potatoes and things got sorted in time so I never went hungry and never had to ask for the internet to be cut off (I still had you lot!). I was ok.  I grew up when there were still restrictions on what women could or could not do but somehow I didn't feel these had anything to do with me. I anticipated that I would find ways to work round them. By the time I was an adult they had fallen away. My experience of the police has been mixed. I have been arrested twice (for protesting about nuclear weapons). Some police I've met are 'really good eggs'. Some you'd definitely want to avoid. But apart from some rather rough finger-printing I've been ok. And even that was merely sensing there was a nastiness which could be dangerous rather than actually being harmed. Everything has seemed surmountable. I am comfortable in my skin.

So what would it be like without this sense of 'belonging', of . . . let us say . . . superiority? 'Superiority' in the sense of thinking one will inevitably be able to rise above whatever happens? What if the colour of my skin made everything different? It's hard to imagine. The closest I can get is . . . it's a trivial example but it's one of the few things to have rocked me at the time . . . 

I was in my mid twenties, at a conference in Italy, having an animated discussion with a Methodist minister. Suddenly he said 'You are beautiful when you are angry. Your eyes flash.' Since then I've realised this is a terrible cliche but no-one had ever said anything like that to me before in the middle of what I thought was a sensible discussion about something that mattered. Until then I'd always felt I had been treated with respect. It was the first time I had been stopped in my tracks by having my female-ness turned against me. In that moment the world changed. It was less of a place. I still get angry when I remember this. It's the nearest I can get to imagining what it would be like to have the world against me all the time, to feel I am being diminished because of something unchangeable about the way I look. To have to put up with this non-stop would be unbearable.

Badge and Link to 30 Days Wild 2020
30 DAYS WILD
Today's Random Act of
Wildness is to
be aware of what it is to
be human.
I'm telling you all this because it's my way of being at one of the 'Black Lives Matter' demonstrations without actually going. If I lived in one of the big cities I would find it hard to keep away, even though I am shielded. Part of me wishes these demonstrations weren't happening. We have a pandemic. If people going to the marches were now to fall ill because they have been near each other, it would be yet another evil, another disaster piled onto a mountain of disasters. Yet I know why they went. I understand that. Millions of my fellow citizens, in this country and around the world, have the wind taken out of their sails, their wings clipped, their lives diminished every day for no reason other than their skin colour or their culture. But someone with a phone who captured the murder of one man at the hands of police in a country far away and not my own turned that moment into a MOMENT; and such MOMENTS have to be seized if we can gather the collective will to change, or be pushed to change. A moment turning into a momentum. The opportunities don't often come round.

17 comments:

David M. Gascoigne, said...

Well written, Lucy. It is a sad commentary on society that such pieces need to be written in 2020. It would make a fine op ed in a respectable journal, or a good newspaper - even one of those labelled fake news. Well done,

Crafty Green Poet said...

Excellnt blogpost. One of the most upsetting things for me when I lived in Malawi, was that many black Malawians seemed to think that white Europeans were better than them just because of our skin colour. A racism embedded by colonialism and still not shaken off after many years.

John "By Stargoose And Hanglands" said...

Well, I for one am glad that you've been walking on the moors of Yorkshire rather than the streets of London. I went on demos when I was younger but doubt that our chanting and placards had much effect in changing anyone's mind. I worked in a very multi-cultural situation for many years and if I set an example to a couple of people and made a few outsiders feel at home then I consider that worthwhile. Maybe if everyone went out alone for a walk and thought things through then the world might be a better place.
(Sorry to hear that Nina Simone's song brought tears; I'm sure you're not alone in feeling a bit fragile in these times. By way of recompense may I recommend the more optimistic, but equally relevant, song "Together As One" by Lucky Dube. The dancing alone should bring a smile).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4Tq-th7cgU

Lucy Corrander Now in Halifax! said...

Thank you David. It is appalling that things have been stuck in place for so long - but do you get a sense that maybe this is a moment when things might start to move a little?

Lucy Corrander Now in Halifax! said...

Hello Crafty Green Poet. That is really sad to read.

Lucy Corrander Now in Halifax! said...

Hello John. I don't like crying but it's also right that some songs move us. Like Billie Holiday's Strange fruit.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dnlTHvJBeP0

Lucy Corrander Now in Halifax! said...

P.S. John. It all brought a smile. And the dancing - such stamina! (When my arm gets better I will practice it while waiting for the tea kettle to boil.)

John "By Stargoose And Hanglands" said...

I thought about including "Strange Fruit" but I always find it a bit overwhelming myself.

Bill said...

Well said, Lucy. You hope moments like these don't happen but unfortunately they do. Moments like these can be a building block for change before the world destroys itself. Something bad can be made in to something good if we care to do what it takes.

pat@siteandinsight.com said...

I'm grateful to you for writing this piece, Lucy. It is so easy to forget the level of privilege that some of us have. It is so easy to think only of ourselves and not of others. I'm happy for you that are able to walk and think and then to write so honestly and so movingly.

Karen said...

So happy to read you have been for a walk :)

A hart-wrenchingly sad and beautiful read Lucy, thank you

K
xx

Birgitta said...

Interesting post from you here!

Natasha said...

Dear Lucy,

Thank you for visiting me at https://natashamusing.com

I'm so very glad I found your blog. Your writing is so honest and straight from the heart.

Discrimination seems to have become the order of the day. It's as if the world is falling apart to it again, after we had re-built our castles of hope, love, peace and acceptance in the past. We have such incidents now in India too.
It's unbelievable how in just a few years the world is swinging back to discriminating, hating getting even more violent.

We live in hard times, though less harder than a few generations back when they were barely equipped for wars and pandemics.

All we can do is count our blessings, be grateful for what we have and teach our children what it means to co-exist with peace, harmony and compassion. Every drop in the ocean counts. And we will get there one day at a time

Sending you love and light. <3

Sallie (FullTime-Life) said...

Thank you for writing this Lucy ... you thoughts perfectly express much the same ones I have. Only I don’t do Twitter so I did not see the terribly sad and frightening video until after I had some context ... that was bad enough. The news is so sad ... I am not sure I could handle it on Twitter, where you have to identify and separate out the outright lies etc......(of course in the case of our country’s so-called leader, that would be easy. Everything he says (or tweets) is a self serving lie.).

Bag End Gardener said...

Well done for getting some words out Lucy, and good words they are too.

I am stuck at the paralyzed, inarticulate stage. xx

Flighty said...

An interesting, and heartfelt, post. xx

Diana Studer said...

I've read widely around his murder - but still haven't found the courage to watch it happen. Words I can process, but I can't unsee pictures.