Last night my social media feed was filled with photos of
friends attending their weekend parties in their Halloween costumes. There were
a couple families and friend groups who were the cast of Napoleon Dynamite, a hilarious
couple who went as their dogs, Curious George and the man in the Yellow Suite,
and even Tess and Emily Tyler (Mary-Kate
and Ashley Olsen from Billboard Dad). People are so creative when it comes to Halloween
costumes! I am so not!
But then I saw a couple’s
costume I was so unbelievable uncomfortable with.
It was on Snapchat. Two
people, one had painted himself brown to depict a character, a “hero” from a TV
show we all watched in high school. Not just face painted, but arms, neck,
chest. Then they added the chains. This, to that couple was a costume, but this
also has a name, and that name is “blackface”.
Minstrel shows started
in the mid to late 19th century, where white actors would paint
their face to depict blacks on stage. The actors then went up on stage and
acted in a way to show that blacks were stupid and less than the white man, a
mockery and made to be inferior in every way.
I know this couple, and
I do know their hearts. I know they are good people and they did not do this
costume to hurt me or anyone. The problem is (drumroll please) it is offensive.
In the moment of seeing
that snapchat, I had 2 thoughts.
1. “OH HELL NO”
I wanted to go all Lemonade,
be even more unapologetically black (this move has done something really
empowering to me), and smash out someone’s car windows.
and I also thought,
2. “help…”
Where I wanted to lock
all my doors and find all my blankets and hide under them and never come out.
That picture, that
turned out to not only be on Snap but on every social media site, made me feel
like everyone saw me and no one saw me all at the same time, and I wasn’t even
at that party (and I feel for the couple who was at that party who had to see
that and had all the eyes on them because their skin color was painted on a
white man. I can’t imagine how you felt!).
In his essay “Just Say No To BlackFace”,
David J Leonard Wrote,
“The ability to
be ignorant, to be unaware of the
history and consequences of racial bigotry,
to simply do as one pleases, is a
quintessential element of privilege”
In 2017, blackface is a costume
(let’s get this clear— SKIN COLOR IS NOT A COSTUME!). Last night, my melanin
was his joke. A way for him to get a good laugh. Not much different than those
minstrel shows, is it? Stepping on his hero, to make his buddies laugh. The
thing is, he washed his dark skin off at the end of the night and lives in his privilege
today, while there are others who still are fighting for basic human rights right
now, and he doesn’t see that.
So
here I am, putting on my Issa Rae hat (and for the record I would way rather
meet Issa Rae than Oprah… can anyone make that happen?). Last night’s costume was
not okay. It was not funny. It did not win Halloween. Anyone who thinks this is
borderline racist, but I am just going to call you ignorant. The comment
threads on the images were repulsive! There were a few who stood up and said
hey this is not okay, and to you, thanks. To those at the party who were too
afraid to say something then, I understand. Thank you for being willing to say
something later. My hope is that in the future, you will be willing to take a
stand in the moment, but your willingness to stand speaks volumes.
And to those who don’t understand why this is
a problem, or why any social issue is a problem, ask yourself why you don’t know? What have you don’t to stop yourself from knowing? In doing it (any act), what
are you benefiting? Who are you hurting? Who are you helping?
Comments
When I started blogging I wanted to be a change agent. I wanted my experiences to help others in some way. I want this to be a safe space for conversation. And while I GLADLY accept comments on this blog post, of all oppinion and views, I am only accepting comments from people who have a way of contact, so that we can continue a meaningful conversation. The only way I can do this is through requiring you have a Google Account.
Thanks again for reading my oppinion and respecting my experience. I look forward to continuing this conversation.
-Sara