All Mixed up: Multi/Racial Liberation and Compassion-Based Activism
Abstract
:1. Racial Oppression in the United States: Starting with Multi/Racial Experiences
1.1. Liberation from Racial Oppression: A Call to Spirituality
1.2. A Spiritual Approach to Confronting Oppression: Compassion-Based Activism
1.3. Figure
2. Possibilities of Compassion-Based Activism in the Struggle for Multi/Racial Liberation
Challenges to a Compassion-Based Approach to Racial Oppression
3. Re-Imagining Compassion-Based Activism in Light of Multi/Racial Oppression
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | See Thomas Merton’s (1963) reference to the Civil Rights Movement as an “Offering of Redemption” for white people in Letters to a White Liberal. |
2 | See (Graff 2019). |
3 | The resistance to the multi/racial population as a monolithic group continues to be problematized in multi/racial scholarship. See (Harris et al. 2018). |
4 | There is also scholarship written on the similarities between multiracial people and transracial adoptees (because of the absence of racial resemblance with parents) and so some findings I propose may carry over and find common ground; however, my specific emphasis on multi/racial experience(s) differs from transracial adoptees because for multi/racial folx, their parents are not only racially divergent from the child but also from each other. See “Being Raised by White People”: Navigating Racial Difference among Adopted Multiracial Adults (Samuels 2009) by Samuels, G. M. |
5 | Molly McKibbin writes about how critical mixed race studies are helping to nuance conversations on race by challenging the assumptions of the Black/white binary. |
6 | For this work, I have specifically chosen mystical experience rather than spirituality because it refers to the very personal and unique events that unfold in the life a person wherein the person becomes aware of the interconnectedness of all of life at a visceral level and is then inclined to move towards the margins of life with more openness, empathy, and compassion. Spirituality and spiritual practices on the other hand are the “path” or postures recommended that may lead into mystical experience, which I argue is at the heart of true transformation. For further discussion on this difference, see Mysticism and Spirituality Part 1: Mysticism, Fullness of Life (Panikkar and Pavan 2014) by Raimon Panikkar and Milena Carrera Pavan. |
7 | |
8 | Richard Delgado discusses the problems with taking a psychological or “discourse”-only approach to combat racism and I agree with this assessment. See (Delgado 2008). However, I still contend that the ability to remain sustained in resistance to material oppression flows from a person’s interior life; for me the interior life includes but is not reducible to the psyche. Another way to put it would be that interiority speaks not only to individual choices, personality, temperament but also how the actions (or inactions) are taken to engage systemically and structurally, which is the key strength of critical analysis. |
9 | See “On Violence and Cowardice” in The Mind of Mahatma Gandhi edited by R. K. Prabhu and U. R. Rao (Prabhu and Rao [1945] 1998). |
10 | Tommy J. Curry admits in (Curry and Hills 2015) that the strength of King’s radical approach and understanding of racial justice was to embrace “Black Power”. According to Curry, this vision is rooted in Blackness and is all about the empowerment of personal dignity that flows from the awareness of global interconnectedness with all other human beings. It would be my sense that this vision of Black Power is built on the spiritual foundation of interdependence where no human beings are enemies (including those who are doing violence and oppression) and thus nonviolent social engagement is the natural aligning spiritual praxis of this social vision. For King, evil is manifest through racism, ideologies, ignorance, and hate within the human heart and this can only be overcome with love and not hate. This does not mean it is the responsibility of the oppressed to end the oppression, this is impossible; however, it means it is the responsibility of the oppressed to refuse to allow hatred to have the final authority on their heart and decisions when resisting evil and oppression. |
11 | While I do not have adequate space in this article to develop my take on what constitutes “violence”, my broad response to this is that the aim of nonviolence seeks to preserve and remain open to the spiritual well-being of collective life (including both the oppressed and oppressors) by seeking the social, relational, financial, emotional, psychological, and spiritual disturbance of the consciousness of the oppressor which is needed to free such a person from the “(un)consciousness of justified oppression”. The myth of violence or exclusion (which is often subtle and unconscious) is at the root of the evil fallacy that causes humanity to not treat other human beings as persons. This also means that while efforts should be taken to sequester the violent tendencies of those doing harm, the goal of nonviolent transformation is to always maintain and affirm the dignity of all parties. |
12 | See (Tetteh 2020) Dr. Ishmael Tetteh’s teachings and collected works by visiting www.drishmaeltetteh.com. |
13 | This recommendation helps re-imagine ways to address the ubiquitous nature of state-sanctioned inter-group violence (performed by whites as the dominant racial group leading the State) against Black bodies as named in the Social Dominance Theory (SDT). SDT problematizes the ways in which individual, institutional, and social forces coalesce to keep social hierarchies in place. My suggestion is that rather than trying to “change the State” from within, (which Sidanius argues is virtually impossible due to the forces at play) the call from compassion-based activism is to engage in resistance through alternative and creative means and, particularly, it offers a way for those from dominant groups to forego and unlearn oppressive ways of being by deferring to marginalized voices. An example of this could be starting a new inter-cultural and cross-group institution “of safety” within a particular community that replaces the functionality of law enforcement wherein members from various social groups partner together in dialogue and model a different way of ‘keeping one another safe’ than oppressive violence. This is starting to take off in places across the US to form new “communities of care and safety” following from the wisdom of Indigenous communities and communities of color where the police will not be involved in institutional life. For according to SDT, it is only when people with high and low social dominance orientations come together in courageous partnership that the tearing down of “hierarchy enhancing (HE) and ”hierarchy attenuating” (HA) institutions (which is the basis of how hierarchy perpetuates) will be possible. The call from compassion-based activism is a personal and collective invitation to see more clearly and allow for the necessary unlearning to take place which is the prerequisite for enacting justice. Compassion also helps to resource people with capacities of courage to disrupt processes that further re-entrench social hierarchies through the power of wisdom and engaged presence. See (Sidanius et al. 2006). |
14 | Within Intersectionality studies there is ongoing debate and discord around the politics of resistance and the role of the Black male. Mainstream society constantly demonizes Black men as violent and aggressive and philosopher Tommy J. Curry shows how this is furthered by critiques from Black feminists and womanists. The issues raised by intersectional thinkers is that Black males (when they assert their voice) simply mirror the patriarchal tendencies (copying white men) and, in so doing, silence Black womxn (this term is used in place of ‘woman’ to center trans and nonbinary women of color). However, Curry demonstrates that there is a very large problem with this in that it discounts the realities of race that Black men continually undergo, further undermining Blackness and making Blackness something that is only legitimized when other “non-Black” identities are paired with it. Curry further shows how it is this sort of thinking that allows for the perpetuation of violence against Black men. While my paper is not intended to center on this debate, it is vital to bring this issue to light in any remedy that seeks to support Black bodies in the US. I argue that this issue also further exacerbates the need for the continual insistence of personal agency in the lives of minoritized bodies (in this case, the need for Black men to share their perspectives) and that the path forward is together and can only be worked out by the way of compassion which I understand to be helpful in producing genuine conversations and relationships of solidarity with members who experience different marginalization than oneself. See (Curry 2017; Wallace 1979). |
15 | My sense of this echoes the humanistic theism proposed by Black philosopher Dwayne Tunstall, wherein the workings of God or the divine can only be called as such when they are tethered to the ethical implications of how humanity treats racially oppressed bodies and commits to resisting anti-Black racism and insisting on the recognition and inclusion of personhood inherent to all people. See (Tunstall 2013). |
16 | Thank you to Frank Rogers Jr. who helped lay a foundation for my perspective in this work at the Claremont School of Theology as well as the anonymous reviewers for their candor, perspective, and advocacy that deeply sharpened my approach to this topic in the spirit of solidarity and accountability to other racially minoritized groups (who are not multiracial) in US society. |
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Yong, A. All Mixed up: Multi/Racial Liberation and Compassion-Based Activism. Religions 2020, 11, 402. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11080402
Yong A. All Mixed up: Multi/Racial Liberation and Compassion-Based Activism. Religions. 2020; 11(8):402. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11080402
Chicago/Turabian StyleYong, Aizaiah. 2020. "All Mixed up: Multi/Racial Liberation and Compassion-Based Activism" Religions 11, no. 8: 402. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11080402
APA StyleYong, A. (2020). All Mixed up: Multi/Racial Liberation and Compassion-Based Activism. Religions, 11(8), 402. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel11080402