It’s time for a critical dialogue about U.S. citizenship
By Jamala Rogers
Nationwide — As we go away our hallowed Black Historical past Month, folks of African descent have witnessed renewed assaults on our historical past, tradition, and contributions to U.S. society. We’re coming to grips with a sobering actuality: our historical past as a kidnapped and enslaved folks brings us to a wall of resolution. The 2 warring identities of being Black and American have taken an immeasurable toll on us. It’s time to assess the difficult crossroads that Black folks at the moment face and have interaction in a considerate dialogue about our choices.
The important query about our tenuous relationship with our former enslavers is just not new.Booker T. Washington printed “The Negro Downside” in 1903. W.E.B. DuBois concluded that it wasn’t a “negro” downside in any respect; it was white society’s downside.
For too lengthy, now we have performed a shedding sport to realize full citizenship and have our human rights revered. The aim posts preserve shifting; the bar retains rising. Black folks have remained loyal and patriotic to America for hundreds of years, enduring excessive brutality, an unpredictable existence, and unsure futures. It doesn’t matter what now we have achieved, what now we have sacrificed, and what now we have endured, it has by no means been sufficient. Though there have been celebratory moments in our historical past concerning the enjoyment of American rights and privileges, these cases have been fleeting. The fatigue of taking part in the citizenship sport goes deep.
The rise of the U.S. as a world superpower wouldn’t have been doable with out the free and damn-near free labor of Black folks. The wealth of former slaves has continued to be stolen, not simply by way of labor, but additionally by way of land, homeownership, and mental theft.
Black folks have demonstrated our bravery with each act of U.S. navy service, but this has by no means assured our citizenship. Since Crispus Attucks, the primary casualty of the American Revolution, now we have been taking bullets. The braveness of the Buffalo Troopers, the 365th Infantry Harlem Hellfighters, the Tuskegee Airmen, the 761st Tank “Black Panthers” Battalion, and the 555th Parachute Infantry “Triple Nickels” have been reluctantly documented for posterity.
When racism denied us entry to private and non-private areas, Black folks created our personal communities. We constructed thriving and self-sufficient neighborhoods, which regularly turned targets of envy and racial violence, extracting generational wealth and perpetuating additional inequities.Notable examples embody Black Wall Avenue and Rosewood, which have been burned to the bottom. The watery grave of Oscarville, Georgia, lies beneath man-made Lake Lanier. St. Louis’ Mill Creek Valley neighborhood of 20,000 folks was bulldozed within the title of city renewal.
The ideology of white supremacy permits white people to commit violence in opposition to Black folks with little worry of penalties. Black folks face violence from the navy, police, vigilante people, white hate teams, and anybody else defending white privilege and pursuits. Their actions hardly ever end in penalties for the perpetrators.
Black folks have righteously met the necessities for full-fledged citizenship however can not make it past the rung of second-class citizenship. We now have seen the likes of Josephine Baker, James Baldwin, and Nina Simone reside exterior the racially restrictive clutches of their native nation. In current occasions, sources have estimated that tens of hundreds of Black of us have left the U.S. and aren’t trying again. Beloved recording artist Stevie Marvel accepted Ghanaian citizenship when the African nation issued a particular welcome for African Individuals. A few of us are leaving the U.S. for security, others for real alternatives. Most are leaving as a result of they’re merely uninterested in justifying and defending their existence daily.
The 1619 Mission laid out our case in vivid and complex methods. We now have the receipts. Now it’s time to decide our personal future and residency based mostly upon actuality, fairly than on the litany of empty guarantees and short-term rights enshrined in legal guidelines with expiration dates.
Jamala Rogers is a author, neighborhood organizer, and political strategist. She relies in St. Louis, Missouri. Go to her at JamalaRogers.com

















