My son “recently started sharing his location with me via iPhone. I didn’t have to ask. It’s a sad state of affairs when even the grown kids want you to know where they are at all times.”
These words were written by the mother of two incredibly talented young men who have ebony skin. It breaks my heart every time I read them.
Over the last several days, when I’ve stepped away from Boom Learning, I’ve stepped into a world filled with the the exhausted, heartbroken, worn-down voices of mothers of sons of color, whose every day and every hour is filled with the stress of living black in America.
This is not the first time I’ve heard their voices of grief and frustration. This time the grief is deeper, more soul-crushing. Their hurt is palpable. The confluence of Amy Cooper’s casual endangerment of a man’s life and the murder of George Floyd have given us a glimpse into the everyday experience of living black in America. The pain of that experience right now has become palpable to all of us.
This world I step into is a diverse, caring and blunt-speaking community. We share a commitment to the law. I have learned much from them. In the aftermath of recent events, the drive to do something is strong.
Today, I am sharing with this community the recommendations from that community for how to begin.
Here are a few suggestions for summer reading to understand modern racism – |
· The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America – by Richard Rothstein · They Called Us Enemy by George Takei, Justin Eisinger, and Steven Scott · Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates · Born a Crime by Trevor Noah |
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