“Martin Luther King Jr. called for us to be lovestruck with
each other, not colorblind toward each other. To be lovestruck is to care, to
have deep compassion, and to be concerned for each and every individual,
including the poor and vulnerable” (x).
Paulo Freire coins the term "conscientization" in his book titled Pedagogy of the Oppressed. The
term itself, which is translated from the original Portuguese as “consciousness
raising” or “critical consciousness.” Freire writes that the term is about
“learning to perceive social, political, and economic contradictions, and to
take action against the oppressive elements of reality.” In a similar manner, “This
book is not for everyone,” Michelle Alexander writes in the preface. "I
have a specific audience in mind--people who care deeply about racial justice
but who, for any number of reasons, do not yet magnitude of the crisis faced by
communities of color as a result of mass incarceration.” As Alexander tells her
own story, she readily confesses that as recently as ten years ago, she would
have been deeply skeptical about the claims she herself is making in her book.
And she freely admits that she was “beyond thrilled” at the election of our
first black President (2). But the more she learned about our criminal justice
system the more she became convinced that the result was a de facto New Jim
Crow that “permanently locks a huge percentage of the African American
community out of the mainstream society and economy” (13). The reason I mention
Alexander’s own initial skepticism about a revitalized racial caste system in
the U.S. as well as her celebration of President Obama’s election is because I
don’t want any sense of overreaching, any sense that Alexander may be
overstating the case for a New Jim Crow, to cause anyone to dismiss this work
without wrestling with it seriously. I began by noting the sharply increased
rates of mass incarceration because perhaps large segments of our society can
at least agree that such high rates of incarceration are a trend that needs to
be reversed, although the troubling privatization of prisons complicates any
proposed reversals. One response to this dire situation could be despair. My
own response when reading Alexander’s book oscillated somewhere between deep sadness
and righteous anger. However, I believe the first step in transforming our
Prison-Industrial Complex is raising awareness that there is even a problem,
that the situation is much more complex than “getting tough on crime,” and that
colorblindness may be more a part of the problem than the solution. To again
quote Cornel West from the Foreword of Alexander’s book, the lesson West takes
from MLK’s dream is that we are not called to be “colorblind toward each other”
rather, we are called to be “lovestruck with each other” (x). The bottom line
remains that the higher percentage of black males in the prison system and the
practice of the justice system in forever labeling them, even after their
sentence is served, as a new form of segregation (58). Thus, we
relatedly need to do a much better job about teaching, promoting, and
protecting our Fourth Amendment rights. Disturbingly, the trend in recent years has been many court
rulings that seem to many to undermine the Fourth Amendment and encourage
unreasonable search - including rampant racial profiling, contributing to a
disproportionately high rate of incarceration for racial minorities. It should
be our task not only to end mass incarceration but to permanently dismantle all
oppressive systems that plague our society. This indubitably cannot be
accomplished without implementing conscientization in our lives and being lovestruck with one another.
A very thoughtful entry.
ReplyDelete