Silent – Silence – Silenced

White Silence = Violence
Silence takes many forms, both positive and negative. The silence of the early morning, before others awaken. The silence of a monastery, where we go for meditation. The silence of government, when it doesn’t respond to a disaster. And the silence of community leaders, when members of the community are in crisis. I think most people value silence at some point in their lives. Silence has a role and a place. But I want to explore moving from silence to an action, a declaration, a response. Through silence I work to cultivate insight and compassion. It is also through silence that people remain unheard in our society and in our communities.

Last month I received a text message from a Black colleague. My colleague wrote, “White silence is real.” This was an invitation and a wake-up call. The text was sent in disappointment and in kindness. Disappointment because he had to say it. Kindness because he said it. For me, the exchange was about being unafraid of difficult conversations. And my role was to say thank you, be silent, and then take action.

White privilege and racism are hard for white people to see. It challenges us as individuals and as well-meaning people who often see racism through the lens of Racist = Bad / Not Racist=Good binary. This really sets us up to be defensive and unable to see a different reality. In writing about what makes racism so hard for whites, Robin DiAngelo identifies individualism as a key characteristic. She writes, “Individualism prevents us from seeing ourselves as responsible for or accountable to other whites as members of a shared racial group that collectively benefits from racial inequality.” This in turn leads to our silence and to our denial of the advantages of being white, allowing us to think through a colorblind lens, assuming that we treat everyone equally. From this place it is difficult, if not impossible, to build cross-racial understanding and discover how race and racism are at play in our lives.

I want to break my racial solidarity with my fellow whites and speak to you. This is not about feeling guilty, feeling indignant, or a need to prove ourselves. This is an invitation to begin to see our racial filters and to recognize their impact on people of color. This is an invitation to look deeply into the life experiences of the Black men and women in this country. Looking deeply means reading Black literature and history, following people of color on social media, seeking out media aligned with racial justice (such as Colorlines), attending race-focused conferences, cultivating friendships with people of color, and engaging in small-group workshops with other white people to talk about what it means to be white. It is a constant learning process, and we will make many mistakes along the way. Like the text thread above demonstrated.

For most of my life I have remained silent, either consciously or unconsciously, when racism is present in conversations and in my community. Honestly, it has been easy to remain silent because as white people we have been trained to ignore racism and act as if racism is either something taking place elsewhere, or that racism is already solved. We’ve got our blinders on. I am going to go out on a limb here and suggest that people of color have also been silent, but in a completely different way. While as a white man, I don’t always see the racism, people of color have learned to accommodate, code switch, and/or withdraw. The person of color feels racism acutely. They are constantly reminded through media, wealth, employment, housing, law enforcement, education, etc. that things are unjust. In the workplace and in the community, people of color may not feel safe to speak up and remind others of racism. I imagine it is exhausting to remind white people of their blindness.

What I have observed is when people of color speak up, particularly Black Americans, they are judged and shut down. White people see them as being angry or unreasonable. That what they ask and argue for is too much. Then we may beg them to hear our apology and we ask them to be forgiving of us! Ultimately, we may even say that we feel silenced because talking about race makes us feel unsafe and judged. Suggesting that we don’t want to offend anyone. I am not being silenced because a person of color has finally been able to speak up and share living truth. We may think our action are about being politically correct and sensitive. I have been this white person making these judgments and requests.

My action, my declaration, my response is to engage in this difficult conversation. To hear the stories told by people of color, to offer the benefit of truth, to speak up when I see injustice, and to stand in solidarity in the hope of building and creating a more equitable world. Step forward with honesty, humility, and a willingness to make mistakes. Know when to be silent, and when not to be silent.


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Comments

6 responses to “Silent – Silence – Silenced”

  1. John Bell Avatar

    Thanks for this piece, Kenley. Strong and clearly expressed. Well done! John

  2. Thanh Ân Avatar
    Thanh Ân

    Kenley, thank you for the giant steps towards uncovering. With this courage much healing has begun….

  3. Juan Avatar
    Juan

    Dear, friend when I met you over 30 years ago. You were already displaying the qualities demonstrated in your writings. I can’t be as long winded in writing, but teaching/sharing the tools needed to combat this extremely touchy issue is admirable. living it is more of a challenge .
    I’m drawn to people who live, and walk these qualities. As a member of many communities, I can attest many of us exist and breath these practices. There is much progress, and yet work to be done. Being the change we want to be, and fostering the kind communities we cherish is key. Kind communities are everywhere.
    Commondreams news is a great site for such people and communities. Racism is an interesting topic anywhere, strange human conditioning. The Beatles said it best, with “all you need is love.” Pure and simple compassion and empathy are it’s pilars. Myself, I discuss civilly with the unlearned, and practice speaking up when I can. Other times, one just has to except that these are conditions which are slow to change. Emma’s revolution is music for us. Have them play in your area. You’ll thank me.there are many artists, individuals, and groups working on these issues, it’s part of our lifes work.keep on keeping on. It makes for a better world. Thanks, for your efforts. They are appreciated. I can’t see to well, I’m on a small screen, and an amature writer. Just had to say thanks, peace & love -j-

  4. louisedunlap75 Avatar

    Thank you Kenley. This is my favorite so far of your posts, which I’ve just begun to explore. You do a great job helping us feel the entire spectrum covered by the beautiful AND scary word “silence,” a realm that can be baffling to us white people.

  5. Kenley Neufeld Avatar

    Happy to know you are finding value in my explorations.

  6. J McClure Avatar
    J McClure

    It’s only within the last year that I was willing to explore the term white privilege. I didn’t want to be awakened from the dream that all was well and I didn’t need to do anything personally. I am just finishing Dina Nayeri’s book The Ungrateful Refugee, an opportunity to see and hear the suffering of refugees, so often also POC. I have also joined the local chapter of Show Up for Racial Justice so that I will have opportunities to take action as a white ally.