I hear people complain, not my
personal circle of friends but others on the net, that they are looked down
upon by their friends for speaking well, for “acting white”. That’s not necessarily true either. I’ve had friends make those sorts of comments
and criticisms and then I remind them that their particular circle of friends
are all educated and articulate. They don't really get that comment directed at them, they only pretend that they do so they can be included in the number of outraged and offended who have nothing better to do on the internet but complain about "those Black people." It seems true however, that a
great many people in our community still feel that to be educated is to be a
sellout, is to “act white”.
I have had several personal
experiences where when I contradict someone’s misguided and tragically flawed
logic or opinion, they tell me that going to college and getting a higher education
doesn’t make me smarter than them. I
understand that as a defense mechanism, an attempt to make themselves feel
validated and to lesson my arguments by believing that years of study,
research, and reading have no impact on one’s body of knowledge. It is, however, nothing more than a defense
mechanism with not one iota of validity. Yes, going to college, studying, makes me more informed. You might have common sense and you might be street smart but thinking you know about subjects that you haven't studied, getting your "knowledge" about subjects from listening to Michael Baisden, no, that does not mean you are more informed than I am.
I’m also the beneficiary of
numerous notes, emails and communiqués from individuals in the “conscious
community”, individuals who are extremely informed and well read, that are
phonetically misspelled, grammatically incorrect, and incoherent. On the rare occasion that I respond to those
sorts of messages, informing the sender that I’m discouraged by their lack of
basic English skills, I’m usually assaulted with the concept that achieving the
white man’s education, knowing how to articulate oneself well in standard
English, is to be unable to grasp my true African heritage. It always seems that the party line is that
TRUE Africans can only communicate in ebonics or some variation thereof. I shouldn’t need a key and a translation
guide have to decipher an email about the plight of my people.
All three mindsets are dumb.
To me, acting like you are white
would be to be ignorant of other people’s history and culture. Acting white would be diminishing other
people’s pain, using your skin color for unearned privileges, trying to oppress
people in order to make yourself feel superior.
Being barely literate and uneducated doesn’t make you more Black, it
doesn’t make your Black experience more authentic. The more we as a people ascribe to the notion
that acting white is to be informed, intelligent, and articulate, the more we
assert that being “real” or being Black is to shun education, the more we are
playing into the hands of EXACTLY what white people expect us and want us to be
. . . dumb niggers. Educating oneself in
an institution of higher learning does in fact make you smarter than stopping
your education at the 12th grade.
How much smarter is up to the individual but to assert anything
different is absurd. Mastering the
English language doesn’t mean you can’t fight for the revolution, it simply
means you can address multitudes of people in a way that everyone can
understand.
To act Black is to behave in a
manner where we excel despite the circumstances. Acting Black is to make a way out of no
way. White people can excel in life
because they have inheritances, nepotism, institutionalized racism that allows
them to get a foot in the door for no other reason, with no qualification other
than their skin color. Acting Black is
excelling despite the fact that we have to work twice as hard to get half as
far. Acting Black is carrying yourself
with dignity and grace when white people try to belittle or demean your by
making racist comments and then excusing it by saying, “I’m just joking.” Our Blackness is our strength, our ability to
survive, adapt, and shine. Shine on
Black man and Black woman, shine on.