Last
Saturday morning, while sitting in the gym of the Haywood County High
School in Brownsville, TN, it was impossible not to draw a straight line
from the murder of Mr. Williams to the shootings in Charleston.
And
yet, we refuse to do so. Some are already treating this as an isolated
incident, much the same way in which we treat every mass shooting in
this country - as an isolated incident. We forget history so quickly.
We’re
seeing the pattern play out again now - outrage, 24/7 news coverage,
push back by the Right on the murderer’s motives, and then nothing – no
changes to public policy and no shift “in how we think about the issue of gun violence collectively”
– a shift that could keep us safe from these kinds of mass killings;
that could keep us safe at school, or church, or in Bible study.
75
years after the racially motivated murder of Elbert Williams in
Brownsville, TN, we witness the racially-motivated mass murder in
Charleston. 75 years after a murder motivated by the “collective evil of Jim Crow," we witness multiple murders motivated by the collective evil of 21st-Century Racism. This time, there is no way we can blame mental illness.
If
we continue to pretend the “gaping racial wound” doesn’t exist, if we
continue to be afraid to bring it out in the open and talk about it, if
we continue to remain silent, then we will be complicit in perpetuating
"the collective evil of 21st-Century Racism."
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