Terry Lynn Howcott
The Black Commentator, September 15th 2005
There are no words to express what we have witnessed in news accounts out
of Louisiana and Mississippi. Overused terms such as revulsion, horror,
terror and outrage just don’t compensate. The combined federal abandonment
and neglecting to death of perhaps tens of thousands of mostly Black people
in hurricane Katrina’s affected regions and the failure of a mostly White
dominated media to accurately and fairly report their truths in its aftermath
have been absolutely stunning.
If we are alert, we’re mesmerized by especially Kanye West who called up
the wisdom and consciousness to speak up and out about the failure of this
administration to act as swiftly and decisively as they did in the Terri
Schiavo case. We can feel very free to be grateful to Mr. West for
his authentic courage while others mouthed finely articulate, irritatingly
comforting, sugar-coated remarks that excuse the President and all his men
from having not acted quickly and decisively.
Some White and also some Black self-hating, devotedly-impatient-and-critical-of-other-Black-folk
readers should know that no hurricane strength, below sea level foundation,
massive flooding, or refusal of some residents to leave their homes and lost
family members can account for the suffering and loss of life we are witnessing.
The punishment doesn’t fit the crime. The accountability for the enormity
of this catastrophe goes directly to colossally deficient state and federal
planning for an entire population of people – a duty and responsibility that
is an established, recognized, documented governmental standard of conduct.
Most of us in possession of historical contextuality are not amazed by this
desertion and resulting media propaganda – which serve one another so well.
We remind ourselves that the suffering, dying and dead in these areas were
neglected long before there was a Katrina. The venerable Julian Bond
recently referred to poverty-stricken Black folk in the South as “just as
disenfranchised as ever.” As recently as August 2005 the Black Congressional
Caucus conducted a bus tour of Mississippi to “highlight the growing list
of disparities that plague the African American community, focusing on disparities
in healthcare, retirement security and affordable housing.” They surely
know as most do, that much of the North and most of the South including New
Orleans was built exclusively by the hand and back of enslaved Black African
folk of recent ancestry, and that they are therefore protecting a national
treasure.
Steven Lerner writes in Diamond: A Struggle for Environmental Justice in
Louisiana's Chemical Corridor (2004), for years before their ultimately successful
activism, Louisiana residents “lived in ‘Cancer Alley’ a Shell Corporation
sponsored “inescapable acrid, metallic smell – a ‘toxic bouquet’ of pollution
– and a mysterious chemical fog that seeped into the ir houses.”
Juxtaposed with the predominant number of Historically Black Colleges
based in the South is the humongous 41% of all U.S. poverty and 40% of all
people in the U.S. without a high school education living in the South –
mostly along the “Black Belt.” (The Southern Black Belt: A National Perspective,
Wimberly and Morris)
We embroider together our knowledge of historical conditions with the present
and are staggered by the devastating screams of mass hunger and thirst and
the sounds of torture we hear from unbearable numbers of Black people.
We are keenly aware of the psychological impact of living alongside the dying
and dead (as our foremothers and fathers did on slave ships), and the sheer
magnitude of our collective loss. We know how the psychosocial development
of Black children in the region are being affected every day, and how that
will affect us all as a people. We try to imagine how brotha’s and
sistah’s with HIV/AIDS, diabetes and cancers must be suffering with no medication
and medical care.
We wonder why horrible rapes of foreign women on their own soil by American
“liberating” troops are not as enthusiastically reported as are the shocking
rapes perpetrated by the emotionally and socio-economically destitute of
New Orleans. We are appalled by reports describing White folks “as
American citizens finding goods for their needs” while referencing Black
folk who are finding goods for their needs as “looters” and “out of control
refugees.” We question where the White thieves are, who we know are
functioning throughout the area. And, we know the same cable “news”
personnel who have presented excellent grounds for disbarment from professional
credibility will likely be awarded for journalistic excellence for, among
other things, downgrading Black citizen status.
As I watch the Caucus illuminate the experience of those on the ground, I
see less in their words, but more in their eyes and in my own that perpetual
reflection of how deeply we are bound together as a people – whether some
of us like it or not. The souls of my people and the efforts of my
ancestors are etched in my consciousness as I contemplate what is happening.
My state of being is drained to a slump. I draw upon the rich, distinguished
voices of our past for consolation. Among many less famous people like
my Grandmothers, I think of Malcolm X before his message was moderated.
I hear what a Dr. King might say in a staunch, unmitigated message to the
country – his voice filled with exhaustion and layers of valid resentment.
I envision Harriet Tubman, who did more to transport people of African descent
from the South on foot than a technologically and economically advanced government
was able to do with cruise liners, planes, trains, a national fleet of busses,
governmental trucks, vans and cars at its disposal. I think of DuBois.
I turn to his masterpiece, The Souls of Black Folk, published in 1903.
In it, Dr. W.E.B. Dubois’ soul speaks to us, describing the “legal and tenant
farming system in the south as only slightly removed from slavery” – and
referring to a “national neglect.” Almost as if referring to the so-called
“religious” right, he refers directly to a “sanctifier of the most hateful
frauds,” and the misuse of Christianity “under which the darkest, foulest,
grossest, and most infernal deeds…had found protection.”
As if speaking to a federal hierarchy void of conscious Black public servants,
DuBois offers an all too gentle hope that Black folk would serve as “co-workers
in the kingdom of culture,” that we might use our, “best powers,” and, “latent
genius.” His spirit seems to know that had some Black, brilliant and conscious
souls been calling the federal shots with the exact same knowledge in hand,
evacuations of hurricane affected areas would have been swift and immense
before the storm.
As if speaking directly to the major cable “news” stations, Dubois, in 1903,
speaks to the “personal disrespect and mockery, the ridicule and systematic
humiliation, the distortion of fact and wanton license of fancy, the cynical
ignoring of the better and the boisterous welcoming of the worse, the all-pervading
desire to inculcate disdain for everything Black.” (capitalization of Black
mine).
As if referencing the dexterity and tenacity of Black survivors of Louisiana
and Mississippi and to the Black underclass haters, Dr. Dubois writes, “We
often forget that each unit in the mass is a throbbing human soul.”
However much that life may be poverty stricken, he laments, Black southerners
“love and hate,” “toil and tire,” “laugh and weep bitter tears” and look
“in vague and awful longing at the grim horizon” of their lives. “These
Black thousands,” he writes, “work continuously and faithfully for a return,
and under circumstances that would call forth equal voluntary effort from
few if any other modern laboring class.”
And finally, as if writing to those who would eagerly stroll past the true
conditions disenfranchised Black people face, Dubois writes,
“We seldom study the condition…” of Black people, “honestly and carefully.”
“It is so much easier to assume that we know it all…or perhaps, having already
reached conclusions in our own minds, we are loth to have them disturbed
by facts.” (Italics mine)
The facts are we’re witnessing the ravages of living in a racist (sexist,
and homophobic) society wherein Black lives are consistently treated less
valuably than White life. Most White people simply don’t move as quickly,
think as lucidly, contemplate as masterfully, or speak as prophetically regarding
specifically Black life. Though there is plenty of room to be
critical of some White’s, FEMA and the federal government as a whole - and
I am - this is for those of us who would reduce the force of reality as if
devouring a bag of chips for comfort or drinking several cocktails toward
intoxication. Many more of us Black folk need to interrupt our own
illusions to comprehend that ever-present racism as it hovers all around
us clawing away at our past and potential successes. Look, so you can
see it evidenced all around you - even through your aloofness and privilege
– look. Your seeing, dear reader and your mindfulness might have you
intelligently contribute to a plan for our collective survival as solid as
our individual household plans for escaping natural disasters. Arguably
one of the most brilliant, prolific thinkers of the early 1900’s, a Black
intellectual superstar, Dr. W.E.B. Dubois saw himself as “bone of the bone
and flesh of the flesh of them that live within the Veil…” We should
afford ourselves and our own people no less indulgence in our lifetime.
Terry Howcott is a Master of Social Work, Lecturer,
Activist, and Writer. She resides in Detroit, MI and can be reached
at Terrylynnh@yahoo.com.This article was first published in
The Black Comentator at http://www.blackcommentator.com/150/150_howcott_katrina.html