I am white and I am privileged; Black Lives Matter | Nicola Adam column
What will your family think of me?
Why? I replied but already knowing his meaning.
I didn’t think to inquire what his family would think about him being with me.
Because I am white and I am privileged.
Some time later we were due to attend an event. Black tie.
But will there be anyone like me there, he asked?
I didn’t know and laughed it off uncomfortably, knowing what he meant.
Because I am white and I am privileged.
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Hide AdOn the night he scanned the room nervously, visibly relaxing when he saw another black face across the room.
With a nod they acknowledged each each other. Strangers but united.
I watched in surprise because I am white and I am privileged and couldn’t possibly understand.
It’s an assumption we carry, however rich, poor or well brought up we are - and however well meaning.
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Hide AdA knowledge we will always be acceptable and always be given the opportunity, as long as our skin is white.
As America burns and protests are heard across the UK this week, we all need to take a good, hard look at ourselves and I include us here in our predominantly white and privileged, intelligent, community and newsroom.
Racism is not always overt and it’s often ingrained.
Murders like that of George Floyd, an act of senseless brutality, break the skin of racism and make it bleed. It is obvious. It is making the world scream in pain.
Usually racism is quieter. It’s endemic and much like Covid-19, transmitted invisibly and when you least expect it.
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They may well be in the mirror.
It’s now 65 years since Rosa Parks famously took her place on the whites-only bus in the USA in an act of defiance. She became a symbol of the civil rights movement and advocate for change.
But still, in 2020, we have a long way to go to do Rosa justice.
No doubt the fashionable phrase 'virtue signalling' will be applied to this column.
I agree.
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Hide AdYes, I am signalling that standing to be seen against racism is a virtue.
I am lucky enough to have a platform to make this point, so I am.
I am white, I am privileged, and to fail to speak up would make me a passenger on that bus, watching in silence as Rosa was dragged off.
Black lives matter.
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