As a PhD student at Azusa Pacific University, I was required
to write a blog on the integration of my faith and my academic study on the
issues of race and social justice in higher education. Throughout the course I
have struggled, not in the academic sense. The subject matter was by no means
foreign for me. I have struggled emotionally. I sat down several times with the
intent of writing this blog and kept feeling... physically feeling... myself hit
the roadblock. I’m struggling with these words because it’s hard as hell to be
Black, a Woman, a Christian, Working in Higher Education and Woke all at the
same time. In a world of oppression, being a member of one of the most clearly
and consistently marginalized racial groups is typically enough trouble for one
to handle but to be Black and a woman feels like more than double the trouble. Reconciling
the gravity of these marginalizations within the context of Christianity and
the consistent missteps of the Higher Education profession tends to be a
constant struggle of turning the other cheek or activating a never-ending blind
eye.
Being “woke” in the face of all these things is nothing
short of a burden… a burden that insures a running ticker of constant questions
challenging my commitment to invest in cultures and communities that have
consistently proven that they mean me and mine no good.
In the last year or so everyone and their mama has been
attempting to prove their wokeness to the masses. A think piece here, and
clever Lorde or Baldwin quote there. A bold declaration that you have awakened
to see the world for who it truly is and how it chooses to see, manipulate, and
harm you or others. Urban dictionary defines wokeness in terms of “knowing
what’s going on in the community.” I think wokeness is the deliberate action of
being honest, regardless of the pain or frustration that it will bring you,
about ones environment or reality. Of course there is beauty in truth…and once
you know better you do better… and <insert any bogus statement that is meant
to make one feel better about having to deal with disappointment in one form or
another>.
Being Woke as a
Black Woman and Working in Higher Ed… #AllTheStruggle. This issue is so
convoluted that this sentence alone has taken me an hour to write. What does it
mean to support and uplift women of color while modeling oppression for them?
Am I teaching you to code switch or am I teaching you the language and
functionality of our marginalization?
It’s being driven to ascend to the
mountain top but knowing that there are rules, regulations, and principalities
that still question a woman’s ability to not just climb but also lead.
It’s knowing that even those who
believe that women can make it… never meant Black women but are way to savvy to
ever say it in dignified company, or are they.
It’s fighting for access for
marginalized students, but knowing that they more than likely will share
classrooms or quite possibly be graded by a bigot.
It’s knowing that my professional
mobility is dependent on top notch credentials and an extensive track record of
excellence while my White and/or male counterparts are statistically proven to
travel farther based on a good ol’ boy or their kissing cousins.
It is knowing, and thinking,
feeling, and living all of these things and still having the courage to keep
going…Because you know that its been a long time coming… but change will only
come at the end of a well played game… and You feel responsible to play the
game.
Being Woke as a
Black Woman, and Giving Honor to God, Who is the Head of Your Life, While
Acknowledging that the Practice of Christianity and Christians are Problematic
AF is difficult.
There, I said it. No one with good sense can look at this
past election, with all its racism and bigotry and not notice that the majority
of folks cheering it all on claim to be followers of Jesus. But how can one be
“woke” and not acknowledge that Christians and Christianity has been cheering
on BS since Jesus dipped out on his 11 homies after his resurrection.
Christians and Christianity have been gas-lighting folks since forever.
Conquest, rape, slavery, colonialism, murder, genocide, homophobia, classism.
racism, misogyny, and oppression, Oppression, OPPRESSION.
How can folks claim to follow
Jesus while leaving such a wake of destruction? Consistently. It’s hard to be
Black Woke and Christian and not feel the pain of acknowledging that the middle
passage and all the hell that came from it was facilitated by followers of
Jesus.
What does one do with the
knowledge that Christianity was literally given to my ancestors with the intent
of controlling them and subsequently controlling me?
How can I have serious
conversations with White Christians about our supposed “shared” faith and know
that White supremacy to this day infects them and unfortunately me as well?
How can I sit up in the good ol
Black Baptist Church Sunday after Sunday and watch Black folk model their
oppression with the same messages of liberation and freedom that have been
poured down from misogynistic pulpit to pulpit, and lapped up by misused and
under supported Black women?
How sad is it that even in this
critique I know that someone will question my love for the Lord or my trust in
perfect will and that I am conflicted about defending myself or even playing
into this age old TIRED conversation?
Its wrestling constantly with the
beauty of Jesus and the demon of the social constructions and manipulations of
religion…It’s hard…painful… indescribable…
I’ve written nearly 1000 words and don’t know that I’ve said
anything. I guess the fact that you can read this and walk away confused might clearly
communicate how genuinely conflicted I am. In reflecting on this semester, I
realized that I walked into each reading searching for hope. Looking for something
that would make my chosen path less difficult. I wanted the lit to prove me
wrong… to challenge the negative truth I know… I am struggling to remain
motivated toward what I feel purposed to do…Alas… It is what it is… I’ve said
what I’ve said.
You really captured the unique burden--you are already familiar with the work (it's what you do and from what I keep hearing, do well). You can certainly do the work that academia demands of you...however you really capture the missing piece in this movement. One cannot fully engage in this work without honestly pouring ourselves into the work--the painful experiences, the unkind words, the racist systems...
ReplyDeleteYes, it takes courage to continue pursuing this work and staying engaged in the struggle. you wrote:
"Christians and Christianity have been gas-lighting folks since forever."
Yeah. We must own that. I read a keynote address on whiteness studies once where the speaker said: Name it. Blame it. Reframe it. That's what I feel like we need to do now, as we think about the institutionalization of Christianity.
Mojo, your 1000 words have said a lot...
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