It may seem self-indulgent to talk about the fears of white people in a white-supremacist society. After all, what do white people really have to be afraid of in a world structured on white privilege? It may be self-indulgent, but it’s critical to understand because these fears are part of what keeps many white people from confronting ourselves and the system.
<>A second fear is crasser: White people’s fear of
losing what
we have -- literally the fear of losing things we own if at some point
the
economic, political, and social systems in which we live become more
just and
equitable. That fear is not completely irrational; if white privilege
-- along
with the other kinds of privilege many of us have living in the middle
class and
above in an imperialist country that dominates much of the rest of the
world --
were to evaporate, the distribution of resources in the United States
and in
the world would change, and that would be a good thing. We would have
less.
That redistribution of wealth would be fairer and more just. But in a
world in
which people have become used to affluence and material comfort, that
possibility can be scary.
A third fear involves a slightly different scenario -- a world in which non-white people might someday gain the kind of power over whites that whites have long monopolized. One hears this constantly in the conversation about immigration, the lingering fear that somehow “they” (meaning not just Mexican-Americans and Latinos more generally, but any non-white immigrants) are going to keep moving to this country and at some point become the majority demographically. Even though whites likely can maintain a disproportionate share of wealth, those numbers will eventually translate into political, economic, and cultural power. And then what? Many whites fear that the result won’t be a system that is more just, but a system in which white people become the minority and could be treated as whites have long treated non-whites. This is perhaps the deepest fear that lives in the heart of whiteness. It is not really a fear of non-white people. It’s a fear of the depravity that lives in our own hearts: Are non-white people capable of doing to us the barbaric things we have done to them?
<>>A final fear has
probably always haunted white people but has become more powerful since
the
society has formally rejected overt racism: The fear of being seen, and
seen-through, by non-white people. Virtually every white person I know,
including white people fighting for racial justice and including
myself,
carries some level of racism in our minds and hearts and bodies. In our
heads,
we can pretend to eliminate it, but most of us know it is there. And
because we
are all supposed to be appropriately anti-racist, we carry that
lingering
racism with a new kind of fear: What if non-white people look at us and
can see
it? What if they can see through us? What if they can look past our
anti-racist
vocabulary and sense that we still don’t really know how to treat them
as
equals? What if they know about us what we don’t dare know about
ourselves?
What if they can see what we can’t even voice?
I work in a large
university with a stated commitment to racial justice. All of my
faculty
colleagues, even the most reactionary, have a stated commitment to
racial
justice. And yet the fear is palpable.
It is a fear I
have struggled with, and I remember the first time I ever articulated
that fear
in public. I was on a panel with several other professors at the
My reaction wasn’t
a crude physical fear, not some remnant of being taught that black men
are
dangerous (though I have had such reactions to black men on the street
in
certain circumstances). Instead, I think it was that fear of being seen
through
by non-white people, especially when we are talking about race. In that
particular moment, for a white academic on an O.J. panel, my fear was
of being
exposed as a fraud or some kind of closet racist. Even if I thought I
knew what
I was talking about and was being appropriately anti-racist in my
analysis, I
was afraid that some lingering trace of racism would show through, and
that my
black colleague would identify it for all in the room to see. After I
publicly
recognized the fear, I think I started to let go of some of it. Like
anything,
it’s a struggle. I can see ways in which I have made progress. I can
see that
in many situations I speak more freely and honestly as I let go of the
fear. I
make mistakes, but as I become less terrified of making mistakes I find
that I
can trust my instincts more and be more open to critique when my
instincts are
wrong.
Robert Jensen is a journalism professor at the
University of Texas at Austin, board member of the Third Coast Activist
Resource Center (http://thirdcoastactivist.org),
and the author of The Heart of
Whiteness: Confronting Race, Racism and White Privilege
and Citizens of the Empire: The
Struggle to Claim Our
Humanity. He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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