Regina Jackson and Saira Rao are the co-founders of Race2Dinner and Race2Community and the authors of “White Girls: Every little thing You Already Know About Your Personal Racism and How you can Do Higher.”
Race2Dinner experiences require white girls to take part in very direct, exceedingly troublesome conversations. Race2Community is a year-long anti-whiteness and community-building program consisting of a nine-week intensive constructed to information white girls by way of deep introspection surrounding their very own internalized white supremacy.
The co-founders discuss to theGrio’s Eboni Okay. Williams about how this sort of program has been acquired and the way they’re serving to white girls break free from being “white good.”
The next is a transcript of their dialog.
Eboni Okay. Williams [00:00:09]: Welcome to theGrio. I’m Eboni Okay. Williams.
Williams [00:00:49]: Racist “Karens.” Folks of coloration have needed to cope with these privileged and entitled white girls for hundreds of years. Some have even referred to as the cops on little Black youngsters who had been merely doing science initiatives or promoting lemonade. And you realize that calling the police on a Black particular person, whether or not they’re a baby or an grownup, can typically have lethal penalties.
However because of cell telephones and Black people merely being sick and drained, Karens at the moment are being confronted and oftentimes dropping their jobs due to their habits. Becoming a member of me now are two girls who’re taking it a step even additional to assist educate white girls how to not be “Karens.” Regina Jackson and Saira Rao are the co-founders of Race2Dinner and the authors of “White Girls: Every little thing You Already Know About Your Personal Racism and How you can Do Higher.”
They maintain a nine-week community-building dinner, a collection of dinners, that assist white girls to look inward with a view to confront their very own racist ideologies. Girls, thanks each a lot for being with us. Now, Regina, one might have a look at your work whereas unimaginable, sure, it might appear very exhausting. Why did you determine that you just needed to show white girls on this specific format?
Regina Jackson [00:02:10]: Effectively, the format works as a result of white girls, above all else, are socialized to be good. And what which means is you don’t rise up and stroll out of a proper dinner. So, they’re captive and so they’re going to remain. So, we’ve got a possibility to actually get throughout lots of our factors due to their niceness.
Williams [00:02:34]: That’s actually attention-grabbing. Saira, let me ask you, what was your preliminary response from white girls in your circle and folks, colleagues, and issues like this whenever you rolled this program out? How was it acquired?
Saira Rao [00:02:49]: Effectively, you realize, in each dinner, so we’ve got dinners, Regina and I truly sit down at a dinner desk with between eight to 10 white girls at a time. And we mainly give them the chance to say out loud what they already know. And so, our guide is titled “White Girls: Every little thing You Already Know About Your Personal Racism and How you can Do Higher” so it’s acknowledging the innate gaslighting that white girls do to themselves and to different individuals.
Then we see all their behaviors. They get indignant. Oftentimes they get defensive, as Regina stated, however we name out what “white good” seems like, and what “white good” seems like with white girls is commonly being silent within the face of oppression. So, what does that seem like? Somebody will say or do one thing brazenly racist or xenophobic. And what do they do? Zip the lip and throw away the important thing. I didn’t hear it. I didn’t hear it. I’m not going to say something. So, we speak about that, what “white silence” seems like. What white girl perfectionism seems like.
Frankly, that’s what we are saying within the guide, is that if white womanhood was a home, white girl perfectionism, their must be excellent, is the muse. So, they must be the most effective in all the things. And so they stab one another within the again and stab one another’s eyes out to get to that. So white girls in the end don’t have true friendship and group with one another. And if that’s the case, they completely can’t have it with Black and brown girls.
Williams [00:04:06]: You need to forgive me. I’m a bit shocked, fairly frankly, listening to this idea that these good white girls, they simply clearly, some white girls are very good. However my expertise on this little present I did referred to as “Housewives,” it simply sort of perhaps exemplified a unique sort of white girl who had no drawback, Regina, getting up and strolling out of the room, however that’s a unique situation.
Let me ask you this. On this nine-week program that you just women lead, Regina, discuss to me a bit bit about, is there a curriculum? Is it simply open-ended? What truly occurs when all people sits down for dinner?
Jackson [00:04:41]: Let me simply say that we’ve got a number of packages below Race2Dinner. OK. Race2Dinner is the precise dinner the place white girls invite us in to have dinner with them and their buddies. Race2Community, the nine-week program, is a program on whiteness. That’s all they speak about is being white. What it’s, the way it impacts them, the way it works, the way it’s continued all through our historical past and that’s taught by a white girl as a result of we’re not white. I’m not white.
So, I can’t speak about whiteness. I can speak about the way it impacts me. I can’t speak about the way it impacts white girls. And that’s what we actually need white girls to know is that every one of our liberation is tied collectively. They will’t be free except we’re all free.
Rao [00:05:34]: There’s a qualitative distinction between being good and being sort and “white good” is placing on pretenses. That is all pretend. It’s phony, proper? It’s saying one factor to your face after which doing it utterly completely different behind your again.
A white girl feels aggrieved by you at work, and as a substitute of speaking about it with you, what do they do? They go name their boss. They name the cops. They name the supervisor. However we’re hoping white girls can shift from this phony “white good” that’s poisonous and violent to being humane and discover one another and themselves and to us.
Williams: [00:06:07] Certainly.
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