By Brothers Writing to Live | The Feminist Wire | NewBlackMan (in Exile)
Friday, August 16, 2013.
We
are a collective of black men dedicated to challenging the ideas of
black masculinity and manhood through the written word. Through our work
we explore the ugliest parts of ourselves and our community, in the
hope that we can illuminate the beauty that we know exists as well. We
challenge each other daily to create and be more than what this racist,
patriarchal society has raised us to be. But simply wanting it will not
do. It requires tons of hard work, and much of that work includes
listening to our sisters, black women, who tend to bear the brunt of our
messiness. Unfortunately, in this regard, we have been woefully absent.
When
the hashtag #Blackpowerisforblackmen, created by Ebony.com editor
Jamilah Lemeiux, took over Twitter, it was a clear sign that we haven’t
been doing enough. Thousands of our sisters (and brothers) tweeted for
hours about the imbalance in our community. We, black men, tend to pride
ourselves on our anti-white racial supremacy activism but often fail to
reach out and consider the pain and trauma faced by the women in our
lives. Our culture actively denigrates the very existence of black
women. We take their love, support, nourishment, and spiritual presence
for granted. As a whole, black men have not reciprocated our love and
support in a way that affirms the humanity and dignity of black
womanhood in the face of white supremacy, patriarchy, heterosexism,
homophobia, transphobia, misogyny, sexual violence, physical and verbal
abuse.
#Blackpowerisforblackmen
became the call, and as black men dedicated to fighting alongside our
sisters, we have taken up the responsibility of answering. As
individuals, we recognize where we have fallen short, and as a community
we make a promise to participate in deep self-reflection and
correction.
This ain’t just an apology; it’s a commitment.
___________________________________
Dear @BougieBlackGurl:
You
tweeted the following: “I am supposed to give a cookie to the BM who
are involved in their children’s lives while Single BW carry the blame
#blackpowerisforblackmen”
When
my daughters were babies—they are now 10 & 14—I used to relish the
attention that I received when I was with them in public. The
expectations held out for Black fathers have often been so low, that
Black men who even show a small amount of attention to their children
are lauded; I can’t say that I didn’t enjoy being thought of as special.
Yet
being at daycare, or volunteering at school, I was also able to witness
the women—often single mothers—who don’t parent for the prestige of it,
but because it’s what they are supposed to do. Save Mother’s Day and
the Hip-Hop Awards Show shout-out (often uttered after rhetorically
bashing a “baby-mama”), there is very little attention to those women
who put in the work, because if they don’t, nobody else will. And of
course if they don’t, these women are blamed for failing, not only their
children or their family, but the “Race” itself.
And
this is one of the ways that male privilege functions—that which is
ordinary and mundane is deemed as exceptional when done by men. When
these everyday activities are done by women, they are demeaned and
devalued—and all we have to do is look at what we pay folks who work in
so called “women’s professions” or the fact that we so devalue,
parenting, that we think that those women who are raising children on
their own, and perhaps on Federal or State assistance, should be
required to work outside of the home, because apparently parenting is
not really work.
Mark (@NewBlackMan)
__________________________
Tomi Ungerer: black Power / White Power Poster
Dear Monifa Bandele (@monifabandele),
You tweeted the following: “#blackpowerisforblackmen when trying to discuss gender privilege is black male bashing.”
I
had one of those moments like the old folks do in church where all I
could do was sway and say to myself “well ain’t that the truth.” It’s
most disheartening because a quick glance at our past or present shows
us just how dedicated black women have been to addressing the black men
in this country. But when sisters speak up and ask us to consider the
ways in which we have contributed to their oppression, we consider it an
affront to our fragile sense of community and an attack on our manhood.
Undoubtedly,
there were the brothers reacting with the predictable “not me!”
responses. But those individual “not me’s!” aren’t enough to drown out
the massive indifference to black women’s suffering at the hands of
black men. We defend to the hilt the culture we’ve created around a
toxic vision of masculinity, but can’t muster up a tenth of that energy
to get into the streets and demand our sisters stop being raped, then
pretend we don’t know what privilege is.
I
saw one brother flat out say sexism isn’t the problem in our community.
If ever there was a moment we could use a drop squad, that was it. We
can pretend away our the sexism and misogyny we inflict upon black
women. We mirror the worst of the defense of racism when we do and enact
untold damage to the bodies and psyches of the women who have loved us
most. We can stand back and pretend, as black men, we’re the only ones
under attack, as we’ve done, or we can acknowledge our culpability in
oppressing black women and dedicate ourselves to striving for better.
The choice should be clear.
Mychal (@mychalsmith)
____________________________
Dear @YoloAkili,
“#BlackPowerisForBlackMen
Becuz I can’t think of ONE national march that black men organized
becuz a black woman was raped or killed.”
I
must have reread your tweet a hundred times today. I understood fully,
maybe for the first time, that black men who profess a love for black
women can’t have it both ways. The truth is too true and the stakes are
too high. We can’t, as I did, call Kendrick’s verse one of the dopest
lyrical performances of the year when the song is bubbling with
spectacular disses of black women and black femininity, then wonder why
we never organized around the killing or rape of a black woman.
We
can’t watch and participate in the national obliteration and shaming of
Rachel Jeantel and wonder why we never organized around the killing or
rape of a black woman. We can’t lie, cheat on, or manipulate black women
while convincing black women it’s so hard for us then wonder why we
never organized around the killing or rape of a black woman. We can’t
literally and figuratively kill and rape black woman for fun, for free,
for checks, for claps from our niggas, and wonder why we never organize
around the killing or rape of black woman.
No
art, no person, no relationship, no sexual fantasy that kills and rapes
black women is going to stop black women from being killed, hurt, and
raped. If our consumption and creation doesn’t affirm, accept and
explore the complicated lives of black women, we can’t be bout that
life. No exceptions. Never. Shameful that after all this life, and
education, and art creation, your tweet made me know that we really
ain’t been bout shit. We really been encouraging black women’s death
while leaning on black women for survival. Sorry ain’t enough.
Kiese (@KieseLaymon)
_________________________
Dear @PrestonMitchum,
“@PrestonMitchum: #blackpowerisforblackmen because as sad as it already was, what if Trayvon were a woman?”
What
if Trayvon were a woman? After reading your tweet, I contemplated that
question for hours. I thought about everything I read about Trayvon
Martin. I thought about all the conversations I had about Trayvon
Martin. I tried to remember similar conversations about
female-identified individuals. They really didn’t exist. And when they
did, they were framed in the context of blaming the victim for something
“she” should have done to prevent the horrendous actions perpetrated
against her. If Trayvon were a woman, the story would have been told
though the lens of a male because our society always allows men to speak
for women, believing this act gives women a voice. We have yet to truly
move past ideas of coverture and do the work to train our sons,
husbands, brothers and male friends to not view women as property but as
equal partners.
The
silencing of women is so deafening that even in life and death we want
to dictate the terms of how a women can give life or how we would tell
her story in death. I don’t profess to understand the myriad ways my
male-privilege continually operates to suppress and oppress women but I
can celebrate all women and I can do the work to love women as Rainer
Maria Rilke teaches. — “Love is the commitment to be the witness to the
someone else’s joy in life, not to be that joy.”
Wade (@Wade_Davis28)
________________________
Dear @Blade_Varzity,
“#blackpowerisforblackmen
Can someone explain exactly how BM are stopping BW from addressing ANY
of these issues they’re tweeting about?”
Blade,
I have come to realize that sometimes we as people,who exist on the
scale of oppression (I am a Black man of immigrant parentage from a
ghetto in Brooklyn who spent 1/3 of his life in prison), are so easily
blinded by our own marginalized place on that scale that we are unable
to see how we contribute to the oppression of others. I say this not as
an indictment on you in any way, but as an expression of understanding
and realization of the shrewd nature of the hierarchy of oppression and
our subconscious infatuation with our own oppression.
As
Black men in a patriarchal, white supremacist world its so easy not to
realize our own male privilege because in comparison to white male (and
female) privilege we think our whatever-privilege is minuscule. But,
however minuscule, it DOES exist, particularly in the eyes of Black
women, and especially when we, black men, don’t acknowledge our role in
their oppression as Black. Women.
Like I said Blade, this is not an accusation just an observation. Peace, bruh.
Marlon (@marlon_79)
_________________________
Dear Yolo Akili Robinson (@YoloAkili),
You
tweeted the following: “#BlackPowerisForBlackMen becuz even in the
Black LGBT community MALE voices (cis/trans) r still privileged over all
women&genderqueer folks.”
Damn, bro! Your words hit me hard—in the best way possible.
I
am a gay black man who has been skilled at calling out white racism and
heterosexism as weapons that have stifled my own senses of freedom. I
even try do the type of self-work necessary to understand my complicity
in sexism and the part I play in maintaining the patriarchy, but I know
that I can do and be better.
I
can do better at not only calling out sexism, misogyny, transphobia,
rape culture, and so much else, but I can be a better brother to my cis
and trans sisters (regardless of their sexual identities) by not taking
up too much space (when I know that some spaces are often made available
to me precisely because I am a black gay cis man). That is the work, my
work, for sure.
We
black gay men have models of the “better”, however. My brother, Kai M.
Green (@Kai_MG) reminded me that some of our black gay male elders (who,
too, benefited from the unearned privilege of maleness) worked hard to
think and practice feminism. Kai tweeted: “#blackpowerisforblackmen bcuz
we 4get Joseph Beam and Marlon Riggs were Blk feminists 2. Feminism
isn’t just for cis women–& we ALL need it!” Yes, feminism is for all
of us. I am in community with women I can learn with/from, remain
accountable to, and engage transformative personal and social justice
work alongside. I want my sisters and critically conscious brothers, as
my brother Kiese once wrote, “to knock my hustle” when need be. I will
do the same for you and others. That is the only way I can grow. The
only way that we can be better. That is only way that I/we might truly
show up as allies in the struggle to end patriarchy, the power-driven
reign of “the man” (and not just the one imagined as white, but also the
one who stares us black men back in the face when we look in the
mirror).
Darnell (@moore_darnell)
______________________
Dear Raequel Solomon (@systris2h):
“cause tyler perry and steve harvey are deemed worthy of telling US how we should be living? #blackpowerisforblackmen”
Your
tweet is complicated and my feelings towards both Tyler Perry and Steve
Harvey are as complicated. I’m assuming the “US” that you are referring
to is black women; but even if that isn’t the case, the black community
at large is still deeply affected by these two men and the public
platforms they occupy. I don’t know who is deeming Perry and Harvey as
“worthy” and again, I’m assuming because of the hashtag that accompanied
your tweet you may have meant black men are. But I’m completely
convinced what is responsible for this “christening” of Harvey and
Perry’s black sagaciousness is not a population, but an institution and a
doctrine.
Black
living is messy and difficult and is more trial and error than anything
else. Anything or body that says otherwise is standing on the side of
black powerlessness as opposed to black power. What is also crucial in
my conceptualizing this tweet is the context that black media has carved
into this moment of post-racial hopscotch and difference’s reduction.
The sheer number of black faces and spaces in American media is slim to
none and the ability to choose with a convicted agency is placed in
jeopardy as a result. But a choice is nonetheless being made.
It
would be misguided and misinformed to approach this tweet without
sensitivity to gender’s role in producing it. Yes, Steve Harvey and
Tyler Perry are black men and, yes, black men have participated in the
patriarchal tradition of speaking for and over black women, but issues
of hegemony and capitalist seduction aside, the consumers of products
made by these two men make a choice to support their products and never
should we, as black people, attack the people choosing or producing the
product, but instead the product itself. Bottom line is this – the
interrogation of the function and usefulness of the tangible products
that make up a black social reality is a fundamental method to form and
maintain black power in this profit-driven, privately influenced market
we know as America.
Peace,
Hashim Khalil Pipkin (@ablkCharlieBrwn)
___________________________
Dear Charlene Carruthers (@charlenecac),
You
tweeted, “#blackpowerisforBlackmen because Frederick Douglass, Booker
T. Washington and Denmark Vesey would never end up in a sex tape spoof.”
You also tweeted, “Uncle Rush and Co. didn’t just pick a nameless black
woman. They picked our ‘Black Moses.’ The gun wielding guide to
freedom.”
You
made me revisit Audre Lorde’s call for women to make use of the erotic
as a source of power, a source of power that because of patriarchy,
misogyny, and white supremacy has been deemed solely pornographic. There
is power in the erotic—it is a site of reproduction, a site of intimacy
(intimate relationships with lovers, intimate relationships with kin,
intimate relationships with violence, loss and death), and a site of
struggle— The erotic terrain is a site of embodied knowledge. That Black
men like Uncle Rush and Co. feel it is funny to make a sex tape
starring Harriet Tubman is violent and sick. They went back and sexually
violated a historical figure and then disappeared the evidence (the
video), but the deed was done and those ghosts will continue to haunt us
like so many other “nameless Black women,” –we must speak up. The
struggle that Black women have had and continue to endure in order to
gain access to their erotic power is real.
Although
Audre Lorde’s call was to women, it is clear that men, Black men
especially, need to interrogate the erotic as well (Thank you Alexis
Pauline Gumbs for this lesson). The erotic for Black men has been
distorted by a violent type of pornography perpetuated by Black men as
well as others—it is the notion that Black manhood is only fully
realized when men through domination, take control of their houses,
their women, and their stuff. The erotic as a source of knowledge cannot
be fully reached until we, Black men, let go of our ideas about
reclamation of some ideal manhood that was taken from us. We must let go
of manhood as ownership. We spend so much time trying to reclaim some
sense of humanity through manhood that we don’t see how we become the
oppressors in our quests to reclaim.
If
we could only realize that everything we need, we have. But then that
is scary, because what is it that Black men have that we don’t want to
face? Lorde stated that the erotic “lies in a deeply female and
spiritual plane.” Hortense Spillers says “It is the heritage of the
mother that the African-American male must regain as an aspect of his
own personhood-the power of the ‘yes’ to the ‘female’ within.”
For
Black men to really be able to interrogate the erotic, we must face the
real truth of our vulnerability too. Because though we will not see a
sex tape spoof of Booker T. Washington we know that historically and in
the present day, Black men’s bodies also archive dis-(re)membering
sexual traumas. We too were made to bend over and open up taking in
whatever the master decided to feed us that night. But if we cannot face
that in ourselves and in our bodies because we only see it as
emasculation, then we lose our erotic power. We lose the power to unite
with Black women. We lose the power to ultimately unite with our full
selves. We lose the power to analyze the ways in which we become
oppressors because we are no longer able to see Black male privilege–we
only see white racism and white men. We reach for that white power not
realizing we have access to something much greater, much more
generative, right here in our own bodies as Black men.
Black
men need to do as Hortense Spillers says and interrogate that being
that we are encouraged to despise, the being that we fear will destroy
our manhood, that Black woman that lies deep in us—this strength is also
this vulnerability.
We
are not enemies, Black men and women. Black men need to recognize that
critique is love. Love asks us to grow. We need to grow.
I want you to trust me.
I
understand that the love of a Black woman is a privilege often times
devalued, but I value you and your love. I value the love of Harriet
Tubman. I value the love of my mother—Black love, tough love, deep love,
mama love, granny and auntie love, lover love, sweet potato pie love,
I’m tired from working all day love, get the holy ghost and pass out
love, get school clothes for baby while you still wear that same ol’
raggedy dress and make it look good love, stay up all night and watch
over me when I’m sick love, I’m tired of yo’ triflin’ ass I’m leavin’
love, I’m hurt love, I’m exhausted but I’m still gonna make you dinner
love, You locked up so I’mma hold it down for you love, gansta love,
Black professional don’t have time to cook but let’s share a glass of
wine love, I will carry your stash love, I will go down on your behalf
love, I will testify in court love, young love, hot love, you getting on
my nerves love, love love, Black women’s love is God love.
I
will do my part to reflect that love. I will hold you when I am strong
and when I am weak. I stand with you. And I vow to you that no quest for
freedom of mine will begin with the devaluation of your body, spirit or
intellect.
I
vow to listen to you. I vow to stay open to being checked, but I will
not wait on you to check me. I will work to check myself too because I
understand that feminism isn’t just about your liberation it’s about OUR
liberation.
If my manhood becomes a placeholder for my humanity, we are doomed. But I want to live, love.
(@Kai_MG)
______________________
Several members of the Brothers Writing to Live Collective
Brothers Writing to Live
is a group of black cis and trans-men who hail from spaces across the
United States. We come from myriad neighborhoods, diverse familial
backgrounds, and different life worlds. We are different, indeed. And,
yet, in so many ways we are the same. We are black male identified
writers whose notions of blackness, manhood, and writing are as assorted
as our multifaceted lives. Whether we have come from the red clay roads
of Mississippi or the cement paved streets of New York City, through
our writings we have mapped out similarities regarding the ways that
racism, gender restrictions, capitalism, heteropatriarchy, ableism,
economic disenfranchisement, heteronormativity, criminal (in)justice
systems, and so much else has shaped the men that we have become and yet
to be. This campaign has united the following black male writers:
Kiese Laymon, Writer & Professor at Vassar College
Mychal Denzel Smith, Writer, Mental Health Advocate, & Cultural Critic
Kai M. Green, Writer, Filmmaker, & Ph.D Candidate at USC
Marlon Peterson., Writer & a Youth & Community Advocate
Mark Anthony Neal, Writer, Cultural Critic, & Professor at Duke University
Hashim Pipkin, Writer, Cultural Critic, Ph.D. Candidate at Vanderbilt University
Wade Davis, II, Writer, LGBTQ Advocate, & Former NFL Player
Darnell L. Moore, Writer & Activist