Tuesday, October 9, 2007

(Beau Sia) Jena, oh my gawd, I can’t believe I have to write about this: 6


Why couldn’t this assignment to address current events have happened when Cho Seung Hui dropped? Or Vincent Chin? In many ways, I don’t know the full scope of those tragedies, but I can connect my own life experience directly to both. It’s also more likely that the judgement of my writing concerning either would be less severe than about the Jena 6. I’m on youtube. I’m not ignorant to the dismissal of ideas coming from the place of, “What does this Chinese son of immigrants from the Philippines, raised in Oklahoma, living the life of an artist in NY and LA know about the history of ethnic tension between black and white in Jena, much less this country?”

Already, I can feel the emails saying, “We are not white, we are caucasian,” “We are not black, we are African-American,” “We are not African-American. We are not from africa, we’ve been here for generations,” and so on.

I imagine more emails. “What does he know about the legal system, he claims to be an artist,” “He’s biased because he’s also a ‘minority,’” “He’s biased because asian people secretly hate black people,” “What of his work qualifies him to publicly speak about a topic like this?” all the while, anonymous comments flood the internet from people self-righteously sharing what should be done and why from the comfort of their home computers.

I read some articles. I’ve asked a few friends (“Were they white?” “Were they asian?” “Were they black? I mean, African-aAmerican? I mean, black?”). There was an OP ed. from the D to the A. Whee.

So here I am, afraid to the point of not even writing about it for over half a page, because of the judgement of others. The hate I may receive no matter what I write. And of course, the dreaded, “Being taken out of context.”

What is it that makes me feel like I’m not allowed to share my thoughts on this without condemnation? Why can we all speak volumes about global warming, even though few of us are qualified enough to speak on the complete picture?

Why do we feel capable of dealing with the issues facing the people of Iraq, but are quick to decide that the Jena 6 is the stuff of the DA, the great state of Louisiana, the south, etc. and so on?

Personally, I was too lazy to investigate the grounds for acquittal in a criminal investigation, trial, or whatever it’s called. I’m legally a moron. I have a lawyer, an accountant, a manager, and never read the contracts I sign. With so much of the emphasis of this incident grounded in “Acquit,” or, “Try them for attempted murder,” there’s little I could offer that would be definitive, or accurate.

So, gut feelings aside, and tremendous fears of Mos seeing me next and saying, “Why didn’t you fully back us up?” I’ll begin with this:

Ethnic prejudice and hatred is alive and well in this country. Ignorance is at an all time high. We are much smarter about these things than we’ve been in the past.

Like men being taught by ‘The Pick-Up Artist’ how to effectively make women feel like they respect them, whether they do or not, we are quickly evolving the language to seem like these issues no longer exist, while still encouraging the actions for them to flourish. Or worse, we are getting better at commiting acts of hatred without actions as obvious as fire hoses. Death by embargo is still death.

Statistically speaking, I wonder if we took every inter-ethnic beating that ever went down in this country, determined what percentage of defendants were tried for attempted murder, what their ethnic background was, what the numbers would be?

I wonder if we taught the events that occurred in Germany during WW II as hatred, and not strictly Nazi hatred, how many other acts would we see in our present as exact reflections of the same mentality and sentiment towards the Jews during that time?

I wonder if we didn’t just react to only the most extreme of incidents, and actually had the time and energy to address much of what we ignore in our everyday, would we be able to prevent some of these incidents? If there is a process to determining who we choose as America’s Next Top Model, isn’t there a process to determining who we will blame for our economic frustrations?

Am I being too vague? Do you get hate mail being told you’re dead if you say another word? Did Pat Buchanan turn your poem of empowerment into a poem of ethnic cleansing for all his fans? Do you walk the street being told to go back to the country you weren’t born in, then told that this isn’t hate? Do you receive anonymous comments for every word you share with the world telling you that you’re racist because you didn’t take a particular side? That you’re evil because you neglected a detail? That you’re wrong for expressing yourself, even if you stated nothing more than a personal idea and made no indication of taking a specific action?

Do I understand how a series of events could lead a person to the choices I’ve read in these articles? Yes. On all sides. Would I make the same choices? No. On all sides. Well, I would’ve definitely sat under ‘The White Tree.’ If we’re so spoiled we feel threatened by someone sitting under a public tree, you know this country’s got problems. But hey, I’m not the principal of a school. Who am I to address what underlies a community I am not entrusted to make sure is a nurturing one? And even if I visited this community, I’m sure there are members of it who’ve been a part of it for longer than myself. Probably since way before 1965. But I forget most of history. Although, I do some of the same things I’ve done since I was 5. Like bite my nails. I guess I haven’t met the person willing to teach me why I shouldn’t do that without feeling completely judged for it. But I digress. Jena 6, yeah. That’s what this is about.

Do you sense a pattern in my wandering mind? How the moon affects the ocean, even though we can’t see it? How my clothing choices are as rooted in other’s perceptions of asian folk as it is in a love of color and a desperate need for attention? The periscope often only sees what it’s looking for, and not what is.

If you’ve read this far, I congratulate you. I know it can be difficult. I never watch the game, I only watch the highlights. I don’t see how the flu affects a player during the course of a game, only the fumble. And if you’ve read this far without holding on too tightly to one sentence you disagreed with, a gold star. I want to hate Breakfast at Tiffany’s because of Mickey Rooney’s portrayal of an asian man, even though I love the story. And if you’ve read this far trying to figure out more of what I’m trying to convey instead of what you are looking for in my writing, based on what you want to believe, I owe you a drink. That is hella hard, ya’ll. I’m in love with a woman, and often focus too much on how she’s not telling me she loves me, instead of what pain has made her incapable of expressing her love openly.

Believe me, I could go on far longer and vaguer than seven seasons of nationally televised nightly news in every major market, because even I know the timeline of how I got to where I am begins before my birth. But it’s late. You’ve got work without overtime. There’s a schedule that probably doesn’t even give you time for this. I wish I coulda just written this as bullet points. The final paragraph approaches…

We need to see ourselves in each other more, mister District Attorney. We need to find the seed that sprouted the tree, before we realize it isn’t a peach tree, but a poop tree. We need to listen to what’s going on all around us, instead of only tuning our ears into our favorite station where all the songs we know are. We need to see that we’re basically all in this together, Louisiana, before god sends down the alien invasion to remind us that the differences that make us hurt, and judge, and separate ourselves from one another, are so miniscule when a species of murderous beings with quantum lazer guns is set to kill us all, because to them, we are all basically the same.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

THIS ARTICLE WAS SO INTENSE...I WISH I COULD MEET THE WRITER AND GIVE HIM A BIG HUG !!!!!!!
PAULINE
CLEVELAND, OHIO

spacemaker said...

CHATTER---TRY THE SILENCE/ENGAGE MIND AND YOU WON'T USE SUCH SO MANY WORDS

Chungyen Chang said...

Oh god, Breakfast at Tiffany's. I laughed when I saw Mickey Rooney, and then afterwards I realized I was Taiwanese American and I felt guilty as hell.

It's strange, you know? Because I've had that thought floating in my head for some time now, even a year after I saw the movie for the first time. It's a helluva coincidence because in my class yesterday someone actually mentioned that movie. Sure enough, the image of Mickey Rooney with the Yellow-face and buck teeth came to mind. It's such a small, insignificant part of the movie- probably less than 1000 frames- but it sticks, and it hurts. But then, I wouldn't want them to edit the movie and take that out- you know it's been done before for other things. I want people to see it.

I just don't want them to laugh.

And the Jena 6. Jesus. I live in Kentucky. I'm not stupid. I've experienced racism all over the place. I'm in a bigger city, but it's still here. It seems to ooze out of the most unexpected people and places. It gets you right here, in in the spot between the stomach and the ribs, so when it punches you you're trying to hold back your breath and your vomit at the same time. It's fucking crazy.

I am guilty of letting these things pass. I know. I am fulfilling the stereotype of the model minority. I let things slide when I shouldn't. But I'm trying, and you're trying, and a lot of other people are too. I think that counts for something.

Keep it up man. <3

Anonymous said...

This article seemed to be about everything and nothing but I really enjoyed. Seeing the picture underneath the even bigger picture is always interesting but sometimes they are just excuses which should not be excused. Very well written and I hope you can kee things going like this. Random but intriguing.

Anonymous said...

I'm a Black female and I understand exactly how you feel. Its hard for someone outside of ethnic race to commit on on something thats not part not concerning his. But its even harder for someone who is apart of that race to disagree with it. If i take the side of my race, then I'm being prejudice, if I don't, then I'm being a sale out. I haven't really followed this But i can tell you this much, I grew up in Chicago. Chicago is very, very segregated. I mean to the point where I thought white people were only for television. I was in an all black neighborhood. All Black school, except for the principal. I didn't even see many white people when i got to the doctors. Most were black.I was already prejudice, i just didn't know it yet. It wasn't till I turned 14 that i started to recognized the fake smiles and empty gestures.Black history was beat into us. I was practically raised to blame it on the white man. Anyway, when i finally came in contact with other races, there was tension. Everything felt and looked...practiced. As if we were going through the motions of being polite. But as soon as something went wrong, oh there was confrontation. And it was only confrontation if we felt it was something we could win. Other than that we(blacks) said nothing. Chicago is a city thats kinda steeped in prejudice under the pretense of unity. Maybe thats how Louisville was. When I read some of the articles on this, I was just like, it should not have went that far. I felt those boys should be prosecuted for what they had done, regardless. Not only was that unfair, it was 5 against 1. thats not even honorable. Then the people were marching for that. That hurt my heart a little. And I know I might get heat for this. We as blacks choose ignorance over importance. Let me show you how the flu works. The player knows he got, so he willingly continues the rigorous workout because he decides not to let it bother him. Meanwhile because he hasn't address the issue the virus spreads. The other players looks at him and say, oh he's strong because he can do this while he is sick. This is the big moment, the symptoms seemed to die down so he thinks hes better. that everything is ok. And at a crucial moment it flares up again. He gets dizzy so he misses the catch and the ball fumbles. Then he blames it on the coach for the stupid play.

However, I really do enjoy your writing and keep it up. You arent the only one scared in taking sides (hence the reason I did this on AZN insead of Blackplanet or somewhere else). As you can see, I still have the flu.

pinkdragon said...

Well I can identify with most I'm the most so called African-American Black.com person I know. I'm "PLUS SIZED" I work 12-16hr days, I'm a single mother of 3 ages 15, 17,and 22 and I'm only 39. I've never been married and guess what it was by choice, and it is only right I'm the youngest of 12 and yes my mother and father were married and raised us together..I have a good paying job I make 75,000 a year after taxes. The sad thinG is I'm still treated like "SHIT" everytime I enter a department store I feel I'm being followed when I drive my '06 Impala home I'm always followed by the police to my home hell i feel like the president sometimes. I have my white work friends who insist that I look like "OPRAH" and that is not a compliment Im pretty...WTF do they think sometimes. I'VE EVEN TURNED DOWN A PROMOTION A WORK because I knew they only did because I was BLACK SAD ISN'T. My family was really upset over that one..... But i have more esteem than that.I'm no token I'm me..This world does bother me alot with it's rule of choice. MY people were forced here from thier homes and now are told if we don't like it we can go back were we came from, typical I'm from my mother and werever she goes and so on I guess..why is it that so many other nationalities can come to this Great USA and achieve so much and then also look down upon my race..just a thought. I have tried to teach my kids about love and hate of others teach them right from wrong I've taught them the liquor store is not a hangout and that education is the key to life will it work...I really hope but life is complicated than that and there asre plenty of obstacles in the way love, drugs,hate and so on but I have taught them one thing that they do cont to do and that is listen to all music and repect all kinds of life
When I tell my friends that my kids and I listen to j-pop and korean pop they laugh and say why do you listen to that crap they don't even like blacks and they already own everything from liquor stores to what most other's call "G" shops that sales so called lol..Urban Wear....lolololol oh sorry, thats so funny to me. But I tell them I love anime and and that in turn made listen to the rest what diff does it make what I listen to sometimes just listening can change the world....PEACE

Anonymous said...

I live in Tampa; a city where a white teacher mowed over 5 black babies, killing 3, who were crossing the street to go to the park. The city was outraged, split by racial lines. White people screaming she is remorseful and it was an accident. Minorities screaming for justice.

This woman didn't turn herself in to the authorities until days later. How can you be filled with guilt and remorse when you mowed over children in daylight, be mindful enough to go wash your car and hide it? She didn't turn herself in until her father pleaded with her to give herself up.

This is the same city, where a white teenager can drive drunk and kill someone be charged with manslaughter, but a black teenager who punched a white teenager ONCE, which killed the white boy, be charged with first degree murder.

I live in the state with many child molesters. This state would issue Amber alerts for white children and their stories would stay in the news for days, months, or even years. But let a non-white child get kidnap, you wouldn't hear about it but for a few seconds on the evening news.

Does it seem fair?