I don't believe I have ever asked a woman to tell me the most sexist thing someone has ever said to her. I've never asked any of my many Jewish friends what the most anti-Semitic comment they've ever received was. I also don't believe I have ever asked any of the gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender people I have known over the years what slur, insult, demeaning statement or epithet that has been hurled at them rose to the dubious honor of "the worst."
Identifying such a thing may not be something most of us will find any redeeming quality in. Still, several months ago, while working on the book I am writing, which has a strong autobiographical aspect to it, I found myself musing over that very type question, namely, "What is the most racist thing anyone has ever said to me?" Fortunately (or unfortunately, I truly don't know which) I was able to identify that monumental event in less than 30 seconds.
Earlier, in another essay, several months ago, I wrote about the five times I have angrily been called a "nigger" to my face, by someone unknown to me, since I've been an adult. I believed then and still believe that is a story that needs to be written about. I'll also begin to tell that story once I resume giving public talks soon. One reason is that I believe it has several unexpected and therefore, very educational, aspects to it.
First, all five of these incidents were completely unprovoked. In other words, they did not occur as part of a series of one on one or group heated and charged debates on race in a number of drunken dorm rooms in my college years---events that are so familiar to those who have ever attended college and lived in the dorms.
No, when I say these five events were all unprovoked I mean just that. They were all completely unprovoked. In one case I was simply walking across a street, minding my own business and a bike messenger quickly passed by me and called me a nigger. More specifically I was crossing a street with the "walk" sign still glowing in its familiar white visage and in my favor when an unfamiliar bike messenger whizzed by going against the light. He yelled something like, "get out of the fucking way you fucking nigger." I had to stop for a moment to survey the environment to see if there was anyone else he could have possibly been speaking to. There wasn't. Now, that young man, in his deranged mind, may have believed I provoked him to yell that at me. Fortunately I know better.
The second interesting thing about these five times I've been called a nigger to my face as an adult is that every single one of them, yes, including the one incident I just elaborated on above--- occurred in the same city. That city? San Francisco, California. What makes that even more interesting is that since being an adult I have lived in Chicago, Kentucky, Mississippi, Louisiana, Florida and Arizona-- places I would venture to say almost anyone in America would believe I would be more likely to be called such a name in before the iconoclastically progressive city of San Francisco. But, whoops, there it is.
And finally, four of the five people in my adult life who chose to add to my adult life experience in such a way were white, openly gay men. I don't know the sexual identity of that bike messenger. The other four instances where I have angrily been called a nigger to my face and in an unprovoked way in San Francisco, California all took place in venues and situations where it was obvious or known that the perpetrators were fine, upstanding, white gay men.
But wait, we haven't even gotten to the punch line yet. None of those events, disturbing as they were, can claim the title of being the most racist thing that has ever been said to me. For that we do indeed need to go way back to my college seminary days. But not to drunken dorm rooms hosting vitriolic, philosophical race debates. Instead we have to look to a group of priests at that institution.
In the junior year in the seminary college, every student had to decide at the end of the year if he wanted to go on to formal study, as a priest or brother candidate, for the religious order that ran the seminary. If one chose to do this, his entire senior year would be a pre-novitiate year. What this means is that one's senior year would be spent preparing to go to novitiate directly following graduation from the college seminary. Novitiate is a stage in the training of young men and women whose ultimate goal is to become a Catholic priest, brother or nun. At that point in my life I was certain I wanted to become a priest in this order, so I entered the pre-novitiate year with zeal and excitement.
The pre-novitiate year consisted of an entire years worth of evaluations to determine if the young man was truly ready for such an important step--novitiate. There was mandatory psychological testing and therapy. There was mandatory spiritual direction focused on preparation for taking vows. There was mandatory evaluation from all the other young men who had decided to go on to novitiate. And there were evaluations from a large cross section of priests and brothers from the religious order itself. At the end of the year the candidate would be given a typed dossier that contained a years worth of summaries of all of that evaluation and process and there would also be a final recommendation stating whether or not the candidate had been approved to continue forward to further study as a novice which itself was a preparation for becoming a vowed person attached to the specific religious order and to formal religious life as a whole. It was all very much like what I imagine an application to a top tier medical school would be like. It was very rigorous. It was all very serious. It was very intense.
With much anticipation, the day arrived when I got my dossier. I remember it as if it were yesterday. The dossier arrived is a large sealed envelope and inside that was a blue manila folder. Inside the blue manila folder were the summaries of all the various tests and evaluations that I had undergone for an entire year. I imagine I was not the only one to go straight to the end to see what the final recommendation was. This truly was akin to being accepted to Harvard Medical School or not. And so I flipped nervously to the very end of the voluminous documents to read the final recommendation. What I read there is the most racist thing that has ever been directed at me in my entire life, either before or since.
The recommendation was made by a group of three priests at the seminary--all white--who were on a panel that collated all the information and came up with a final recommendation based, presumably, on what they believed was a thorough analysis of all the information that had been collected throughout the year. Given this, I don't know precisely who came up with the final recommendation. I do know it was not my spiritual director. I do know it was not my therapist, who was also a priest of the order. I do know it was not my peers. It was likely two of the three priests on that final panel.
The recommendation from the three member, all white panel of priests was that I was indeed suited to go on to study for the priesthood but that I needed to take a year off to go work at a predominantly black church somewhere in order to get more in touch with my "blackness."
I just literally laughed out loud just now when I wrote that above paragraph. I'm still laughing. I can assure you, the time I first read it however, there was absolutely no laughing happening whatsoever. At that time I was stunned, just stunned. I truly have no other words to describe how I felt at the time. Devastated may...may come close...
Many years ago when I was a young child, I would place a white t-shirt on my head and prance around the house pretending to be a white girl with long blond hair. None of the priests at the seminary were ever told about this. Besides, I'm pretty sure that particular childhood burlesque had far more to do with wanting to be a girl than wanting to be white. So it was a complete mystery to me exactly what information they used to come to the conclusion that I was not comfortable enough with my own blackness to go on to novitiate. I still don't know. Additionally, just how does a 50-something year old white priest who has largely been separated from the world at large, all his adult life, come to know or realize such a thing about another person? I truly and I do mean truly shudder to imagine what they were thinking. I really don't want to know either. I never found out from anyone directly involved in the whole mess and that is completely fine with me.
Some time after reading that recommendation, I pulled myself together enough to complain to the main superior of the order in America--a benevolent man who was also the superior to all the priests who had signed off on that unbelievable recommendation. He also just happened to be a black man/priest. That recommendation was then very quietly and swiftly revoked and I went on to novitiate with all my classmates minus the need to become more "black" first. The damage however, had already been done. I am impressed however, to see that I can get such a hearty and genuine laugh out it all now, all these many years later. But is the laughter masking something far more disturbing and unresolved?
2 comments:
Let me know when your autobiography is available for purchase! I am also interested in releasing one, and I have already started planning it, but due to hardship in my life I don't feel brave enough to resume... yet. Maybe if I just start writing...
It saddens me to hear what you've been through, but your laughter seems to indicate that you know how to put it in context.
None of it has anything at all to do with you - it's just the ugliest part of a person's psyche coming out, over which you have no control.
I also like to think that, if I am just at my best all the time, busying myself being a conscientious citizen and good role model, people will treat me with at least a grudging restraint, but there have been people who have lashed out at me for one reason or another and I've made the mistake of wondering what I could have done to avoid that, but that's the wrong question.
All we can do is take whatever in stride, and move on.
The most misogynistic thing that has ever happened to me... wow, there have been so many. Being called an obscenity from a moving car at Sydney's most famous gay neighbourhood (the worst word you've ever heard, I'm not going to write it). But even something a lot less obvious than that can hurt so much... like when a friend I had been quite fond of grabbed one of my ponytails and tugged as he was walking. I didn't want to process that he was acting abusively, so I just laughed it off, tried to pretend it hadn't hurt my dignity. We were both university students at the time. Thankfully I woke up to the reality of his hatred for women and no longer maintain contact with him.
This morning I woke up with the words of an online acquaintance in my head. He said, on two different occasions, that I was 'weird' and that something I had written was 'ludicrous'. I feel stung because I liked him... I'm always willing to give people the benefit of the doubt even when it looks like they might disappoint me - maybe that's not the best idea, because I keep getting disappointed and hurt.
So I guess it's a constant process of feeling good, staying intellectually healthy, and paying attention to the good stuff life throws my way than the bad.
Hi Epiphanie,
Thank you for your heartfelt comments.
At this point I don't have a real sense of when the book will finally be available for purchase. I believe it is conceivable it could be available sometime in the first half of 2013. I view the book principally as a spiritual book that has many of my life experiences as the backdrop for that spiritual journey/spiritual exploration. Ultimately I view it largely as a testament to the resiliency of the human spirit. So much of my life, both my personal experiences as well as what I have experienced from others, is a testament to that. I have found it is impossible for me not to ultimately interpret all of that in spiritual terms.
While I, like anyone else who has lived any kind of life worth living, have experienced many things in this life that could be termed "negative" or "challenging," I have not created an identity out of those thing--- in other words, I in no way view myself as a "victim" of life. By the same token I believe it is important for me to give voice to these things. Part of that is because I see myself as an educator. Part of it is because as a spiritual teacher/teacher of conscious living, I see it as my job to let people know that we have the ability to go through horrible life experiences and do just that--go through them. In the process I have pretty much learned that none of it is personal. I have learned that nothing is ever personal--even if those who may try to hurt us believe very sincerely that they are personally attacking us. I know we do not have to buy into that consciousness.
As for how I ultimately process injurious things that other people do to me which you may be able to apply to some of the situations you shared above--I use a two pronged approach. I know that:
1. Each of us is doing the absolute best we can do in every single moment of our lives that we can do.
2. And...ever single moment provides us with an opportunity to grow and learn how we can more consciously live in the world.
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