Tag Archives: race

Black Deaf History

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So I co-moderate fydeafies on tumblr and I posted this video to that blog but it occurred to me that I should post it here too. It is in ASL but has subtitles for those who don’t know ASL.

Transcript:

Hello, my name is Opeoluwa Sotonwa and I work at the Kentucky Commission on the Deaf and Hard of Hearing as the information program coordinator. I’d like to talk to you a little bit today about back deaf history.

As you already know, every February in America we celebrate Black History Month. Well, we also celebrate Black Deaf History at the same time. I, myself, am from Africa, but Black History month impacts me and reminds me about something that has happened in the past. I am talking about a man named Dr. Andrew Foster. He was a black American man who happened to be the first deaf black person to graduate from Gallaudet University. Then he also obtained a Masters degree from Eastern Michigan University.

After Dr. Foster finished his schooling, he went to Africa. You see, up until that time many missionaries went to Africa and they claimed that they never saw any deaf people. Really, there were many deaf people, but they were hidden from view by their parents because the culture there is different and they oppressed and discriminated against deaf people. Deaf people were never given the opportunity to go to school or do anything else.

When Dr. Foster came to Africa, he first went to Liberia in West Africa and established the first deaf school in Africa. At first when they established school, they thought that no one would show up, but they were shocked to see that many deaf people showed up, filling the school to its capacity and resulting in a waiting list.

Then Dr. Foster decided to move to various countries within Africa to set up deaf schools as well as church programs and vocational training centers all over, altogether about 30 centers. Finally, he set up a headquarters in Nigeria.

I’m standing here today because I benefited from what Dr. Foster started in Africa. If Dr. Foster had never gone to Africa, deaf people would never have gotten their educational opportunities, they would never have gotten their right to go to school. Due to Dr. Foster’s efforts, I am able to stand here as I am standing here today. I was able to obtain an education in Africa and then I was able to go to America on a scholarship and then I was able to live an independent life.

Today, in Africa, we remember him and honor him for all he has done for the deaf communities in Africa. Recently, we have established a higher education school and we named it Andrew Foster Memorial College. We hope that one day that school will become a University as well. Also, at Gallaudet University, they honored Dr. Foster by dedicating a hall to him. Really, we in Africa owe a lot to Dr. Foster and he should never be forgotten.

We, at KCDHH, recognize and honor Dr. Foster for his role in establishing deaf schools in African countries. Every February, when we celebrate Black History Month, we remember him and praise all he had done. Thank you.

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Prejudiced students

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In the past, I’ve talked about how prejudiced faculty members can be a barrier for students who are just trying to get through college without having to experience racism or sexism or whatever. But here is another piece: what happens when students alienate faculty members?

So, I used to go to a very “intellectually-rigorous” school; the student body was mainly composed of white upper-class individuals. Many were genuinely smart people who cared about intellectual discourse, but there were definitely some people whose parents had bought them education and schooling. One semester, I signed up for a course in African History that covered the slave trade, colonialism, and modern-day post-colonial issues. My class was pretty typical of the rest of the university: white upper-class prep-school graduates.

The professor was the chair of the department, and he had a PhD in the medical history of an African region (which I won’t name because I want to maintain my privacy). He had been studying African History for thirty or so years, and he had actually grown up in Africa, so I definitely respected his knowledge and range of experiences. One of my friends who had taken one of his classes said that he was very good at bringing in all of his knowledge and experiences – for instance, he told stories about the atrocities that colonizers had forced his grandparents to do, and then he’d tie it back to the lesson. So I was looking forward to the class.

However, from the very first day, many of the students acted as if they had superior knowledge to him. They were smart enough to get into this elite school, so they acted as if they were the smartest people in the world – which is a common problem at Ivy-League type schools. It’s just insulting how little they respected his expertise – it’s like a group of first-graders thinking that they are smarter than their teacher. Even if the student is naturally bright, the teacher still has more experience.

I don’t know if the students realized just how prejudiced and rude they were being, but they often would just keep carrying on the discussion among themselves instead of letting the professor chime in – they’d often talk over him, too. They would talk about their interpretation of the text, which was often full of racist and inaccurate notions that had absolutely no basis in fact. And they would often disrespect the terminology that my professor had outlined at the start of the semester – for instance, he pointed out that it is offensive to call African countries or ethnic groups ‘tribes’ because of the association of African peoples with primitive peoples, but the students would constantly say “tribe” in a context where it was not appropriate.

On the last day of class, our professor just didn’t moderate the discussion at all. He just sat back and let all the white kids say crap about Africa. That discussion was pretty horrible.

Throughout that entire semester, it was clear that the students’ unconscious or conscious racism – “black men are unarticulate and unintelligent” – was leaking through and affecting the class. It was awful. I had no idea how to handle it at the time. I ended up not doing anything, which I probably wouldn’t do today. Our professor often seemed weary in class, as if he dreaded coming to class – and, honestly, with that hostile attitude of the students, I don’t blame him.

It was disappointing because he couldn’t share his knowledge and expertise and experience. I did learn a lot from that class – for instance, we had to read How Europe Underdeveloped Africa by Walter Rodney, which caused me to completely rethink the relationship between Europe / the US and Africa. But I really wish that my fellow students could have respected my professor enough to let him share the knowledge that he had gained over his life of studying African history.

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Teaching progressivism

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I had a pretty interesting convo with one of my students today. I’m not a high school teacher, but that’s definitely one of my possible careers. In my opinion, part of being a good, effective progressive teacher, especially when working with social studies, is learning how to lead the student to their own conclusions.1 You don’t want to come right out, state your opinions, and expect the student to adopt them – which, unfortunately, is exactly what some teachers do.

This particular student is rather ethnic-nationalist. I can’t get into specifics due to confidentiality, but let’s just say that he belongs to an ethnic minority (not Native American – you’ll see why this matters in a moment) that was shat upon by the U.S. and that he knows more about the history behind that than many white students do. We get a lot of students like that – and it honestly just makes me glad to see people taking history seriously. I am just glad to see students reading about history, especially a lesser-taught history, even if the impetus to learn comes from nationalistic motivations. I’ll gladly talk about that aspect of history with them and help them keep it fact-based (for example, Tuskegee did happen, but abortions as genocide did not).

Because this student has already figured out that the American Dream isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, this student also asks a lot of questions, which I think some teachers2 find really exhausting – but I love it. Honestly, it’s partly because I can relate to that attitude – I didn’t ask teachers questions, but I definitely questioned everything (and still do). And it’s partly because I’m just glad to see him engaging in something (ie, school) that will help him to say ‘fuck it’ to The Man and create an awesome life.

Today, I was going over the questions on a test that my student had missed. We began talking about a question on the test; he had bubbled in an answer that said: “The U.S. Government respected the Cherokee right to have their own land and their own laws.” Now, you don’t even have to read the question – if you know the history of Native Americans, you know that that’s probably not the answer because this simply did not happen because of how hostile US/Native relations were.

I tried to communicate this to my student – “So, the thing about this answer is, it’s just not true. It never was.”

“Oh,” he said, “But I thought that the U.S. respected the Native American right to their own land, because they got these independent states and stuff?”

“Well,” I said, “That’s true, but the U.S. didn’t allow them to keep their territory. They went from this,” I indicated a large area, “to this,” I indicated a smaller area in a different spot.

So then my student got off into this tangent about how he had read that some contemporary Native Americans had tried to go back to a more traditional way of living but they couldn’t afford to so they went back on federal government assistance.

“I don’t know about that,” I said, “But the struggles that modern Native-Americans face is different than what they faced in their history. So, back to this question – the thing that you have to understand is that the U.S. was very very…” I frowned. “Not friendly to Native Americans.”

“Oh,” he said, “Like immigrants?” I’m pretty sure he was trying to get a rise out of me but who knows, really.

I just kind of wagged my head and said, “That’s possible, but that’s outside of the scope of the test. Now, back to this question.” (I wish I’d said, “We’re talking about Native Americans, though” or something similar. The gifts of hindsight.)

So then he was like, “Oh wait, so they took their land away?”

“Yep.”

“That’s fucked up, man.”

At this point, I was like, I think he understood, and I said, “Yep. OK, you feel good about question 12?” He did. “OK, let’s go to question 18 now…”

It feels good, dude. Looking back, it’s exactly what my best teachers in high school did – they guided us to concepts, and they showed us the knowledge necessary to become better people. I don’t know how I feel about being in the same room as 30 hearing teenagers all day long, but becoming a high school social studies teacher would be pretty nice in some ways.

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  1. Really, I was thinking about it – and, as long as the student uses logic and the opinions of all affected persons, I’m okay with whatever conclusion the student comes up with. It can be radically conservative for all I care, but the problem with radical conservatism is that it only focuses on the concerns of a few and is therefore logically inconsistent. []
  2. To be fair to the other teachers, it doesn’t help that he’s chauvinistic – I can imagine that they wouldn’t want to be degraded by him all day. But he’s great with me, which gives me mixed feelings. I’m glad that I can be a male role model for him, but it bums me out whenever he talks about women in a demeaning way. It’s just gross. I’m usually just like, “Respect women,” and then I change the subject. []
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How a narrow definition of literature can be problematic

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I recently read a discussion about whether Harry Potter can be considered literature. The forum’s admin admitted that she had “my own, limited definition” of literature. It bothered me, to be honest, because the narrowness of what is considered ‘literature’ is why I stopped being an English major.

You see, all too often in high school, I got these white male English teachers who taught only old white men. For instance, I had an English teacher who assigned us Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad but didn’t discuss any of the racist/colonialist aspects of it. He idolized Edward Abbey and William Faulkner but never discussed work by people of color or females or anything. That attitude alienated me – I wanted to read stories about myself that I could relate to, not stories about “good ol’ boys.” Furthermore, I knew there was something fundamentally wrong about considering one cultural standard to be more “worthy” of the label ‘literature’ than other cultural standards, but I couldn’t exactly articulate it.

Granted, I had an amazing English teacher who acknowledged that the definition of ‘literature’ is too narrow. But he was the exception rather than the rule. That changed in college to some degree – for instance, I took a “women in art history” class that introduced me to an amazing essay that argued that art historians have traditionally excluded the contributions of women artists. The notion of the artist as a ‘great man’ is patriarchal; sexism gets codified when historians and curators decide what work is “worthy” of belonging in the canon of “great art” and exclude women artists.

That essay caused me to realize that the problem that I had with the narrow definition of ‘literature’ and ‘art’ is the fact that prejudices – racism, sexism, whatever – are codified into the idea of ‘art’ and ‘literature.’ If curators, historians, and academics don’t think that the voices of minority people or new ideas are worth hearing, they won’t be included in the canon of ‘art’ or ‘literature.’

And, unfortunately, I did experience that phenomenon firsthand in college.

Before I transferred, I went to a very, very white upper-class college. At first, I enjoyed its focus on academia because I love learning and contributing to an intellectual conversation, but after a while, my problems with it grew and I began to experience negative things. One of the most major negative experiences that I had in college was my creative writing course – it was so negative, in fact, that I stopped writing for a while after that course.

I had many, many, many problems with that course. I’ve talked about it before in this blog, so I won’t dwell on it too much, but one problem that I had with the class was the fact that my professor was an older white female with an extremely narrow definition of what she considered ‘literature.’ She was extremely prejudiced but believed that she was in the right because of the very narrow, specific definition of ‘literature.’ Looking back, I’m not sure if she knew that she was bigoted – maybe she thought she was totally justified in her approach to creative writing because of her narrow definition of literature.

Here’s a story. One day, an African-American student with a very “black” name brought in a first-person story that she had written in ebonics. We all read the stories and peer-reviewed them. When I read her story, my impression was that it was an extremely good story – the characterization was completely natural, the dialogue was superb, the grammar was generally quite good with a few quirks here and there, and the plot itself was very engaging. And her use of ebonics was totally justified – it added to the overall feel of the story and lent it a distinct rhythm/cadence that I enjoyed. It was only the first two or three pages of a larger story, but I wanted to read more.

She never said why she chose to write it that way, but my guess is that, since she had grown up in this specific minority, she wanted to write a story that would immerse the reader in the reality that she inhabited. In that particular city, white people and African-American people had distinctively different speech patterns. She spoke “white” at school, but I’m sure she probably went home and switched into a more natural mode of speaking. She wasn’t a white writer, so why write like one?

That story, however, did not go over well with my professor. The very next day, she gave us an angry lecture – she spoke about the purity of English and how the writing of Shakespeare and a bunch of other old dead white men are the highest standard of literature. She didn’t care whether or not we aspired to write books like theirs – she wanted us to learn how to write like old dead white men (eg, a superior form of writing) before writing in an “experimental” manner.

The fact that our professor got angry, frankly, upset and scared me – her reaction was disproportionately intense and we could all tell that it was fueled by her intense racism/fear. Also, by giving us a lecture immediately after a black student dared to write differently about the value of “great literature” that ignored anything that wasn’t by an old white man, she basically told us that the stories by people of color are worthless. I mean, this girl’s story wasn’t that “experimental” – all she did was write in a pattern of speech and a first-person point of view that immersed the reader in what she had grown up with. This is a well-established tradition – in fact, the first thing that came to my mind was Catcher in the Rye, which academics often consider ‘literature’ and, like this student’s story, also narrates the story in a very colloqual/immersive manner. Furthermore, it’s ironic that she expected us to write like Shakespeare because he was very ground-breaking.

I think that the root of her negative reaction was the fact that the girl’s story immersed our professor in a black person’s reality. And she was so racist that she absolutely did not want to experience that reality. Her attitude was, Who would want to know what it is like to be a black person for a few moments? I can’t imagine how that girl felt about being rejected in this manner.

That class is what alienated me from writing for a while – in addition to witnessing her bigotry, I also experienced it on the deaf and queer fronts. This made me realize that those who oppress other minorities will most likely oppress you, too, even if you’re in an unrelated minority. Like I said in my previous post, I was like, “If there are experts this bigoted in the writing world – agents, publishers, etc – who have the power to dictate the landscape of contemporary literature, how am I going to get my foot in the door? Will my deafness and queerness forever bar me from participating in the writing world?”

Literature is an ever-evolving and ever-changing phenomenon. If students are alienated by the prejudices of an earlier generation and their literary aspirations are quashed, how will literature evolve? It’s like that saying: “We kill the caterpillars, then complain that there are no butterflies.” What is “cutting-edge” today will be a “classic” work of art in a few centuries – historians too often appreciate the contributions of artists long after they’re gone.

Now, I don’t have a problem with the fact that some people prefer certain types of literature over others. If you like As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner, that’s great! Where it gets problematic for me is when people act like certain types of literature are superior to others; the novels within their favorite genres (classical 18th century English authors, early-twentieth century American, novels by dead white men, etc.) are the only things that they consider to be ‘literature.’ All too often, adopting a narrow definition of ‘literature’ ends up excluding the contributions of minority writers simply because their stories don’t fit in with the cultural ideals of the academic. And that’s not right.

In the end, who cares what is ‘truly’ literature? There’s no such thing, really – it’s simply that the prejudices of old white academics have been codified into this list of “great” books. We need to set that aside and let young writers push the boundaries of what we consider ‘literature.’ We may end up with something trashy, or we may end up with something truly amazing and groundbreaking.

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Deaf people of color

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In the city where I used to live, there was a pretty nifty store in a low-income neighborhood that allowed people to learn about computer geek culture – with donations, they were able to build computers, learn programming languages, learn about network security, and so forth.

Once, I went there to donate computer parts. One of the staff members assisting me, an African American lady, noticed my cochlear implant and began telling me about her deaf son. She was hearing, so she wasn’t quite sure how to deal with him in some ways – which is super-common in hearing parents; my own loving parents were like that. So I guess she was looking for a deaf man to give her some advice about how to raise her boy.

She told me that he was acting out in class because he couldn’t always understand teachers, and I nodded – yeah, I can relate to that; I did the same thing in grade school and went to the principal’s office a lot. But then she kept talking and I quickly realized that her son was experiencing a vastly different reality than I did when I was a child. When I was a kid, I was sent to the office to talk to the principal and got sent home to watch TV and that was it. In contrast, this deaf kid’s school had labeled him as a ‘troublemaker’ and wanted to put him in a class for children with aggression disorders. But the thing is, he didn’t have an aggression disorder – he was simply deaf! So they were basically setting him up for failure.

There’s probably a lot of reasons why this kid is experiencing different issues than I did, but I think that a major factor is racism. Authority figures have this tendency to see white people as innocent and racially profile people of color as criminals. So, they feel a need to “intervene” in the life of an African-American deaf boy – but the problem is, their interventions are inappropriate. It would be better to address the root cause of the problem – lack of access to the education causes him to become bored and act out – rather than treat the symptom that fits within preconceived stereotypes. Instead of assuming that every boy of color who acts out has an agression disorder, how about addressing the root cause of the problem?

Worse, it sounded like this lady’s doctor wasn’t really communicating the kid’s needs very well – she kept talking about how she wanted to get him a cochlear implant but the hospital kept telling her no. Later on, she talked about how the kid’s deafness was from nerve damage. I don’t think she realized that nerve damage rules out someone as a cochlear implant candidate – even if the cochlea worked perfectly, the auditory signals wouldn’t be able to get to the brain. I don’t know – it just seemed like a failing of the healthcare system to me.

I haven’t really heard a lot of Deaf people talk about intersectionality, except maybe for LGBT/Deaf issues. I’ve also noticed that the Deaf community is pretty white. I think that we could do a better job of being more inclusive – the Deaf community is a wonderfully empowering environment for a lot of people, so I think it would be awesome if we could expand our community to include everyone, not just people who look like us.

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Gang Signs & ASL

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I learn so much every day in my new job working with at-risk youth. I wish I could share all my insights with you guys and start a dialogue every day, but my schedule is usually quite busy.

The other day, an interesting situation occurred. One of my students is the type who tries to make friends with everyone, including the teachers. He usually succeeds, but teachers can’t exactly be his friend because that is not our role. So we have to remind him to behave within professional boundaries that are appropriate to a classroom setting – for example, he cannot say that a random female adult is hot. He also jokes around a lot with everyone.

The other day, this student jokingly made signs at me that looked like gang signs. There were several things objectionable about that, so I explained that it is insulting to make random gestures to Deaf people because it mocks actual sign language, certain signs mean certain things to certain people but don’t mean anything outside of that group, and it is not acceptable to make gang signs in our classroom because it is intended to be a safe space for all people with no territory claims. He took it all quite well and showed engagement by asking questions, so that made me happy.

That wasn’t the first time that I’d thought about gang signs and deafness in recent months, however.

During a recent training day, members from a local gang outreach organization came and talked to us about gangs. They showed a clip of gang signs, and I was frightened at how much it resembled Strong-ASL.1 I could tell that it wasn’t ASL, but it certainly made me frightened that I could be signing ASL to a friend in the hood and then get shot as a result. I mean, the majority of Hearing people think that sign language consists of nothing more but random, spontaneous gestures, like miming – how can I expect them to understand the difference between gang signs and ASL?

After the video clip, I spoke to my interpreters, who shared the same concerns that I did. They said, “Yeah, we’ve all heard stories about Deaf people getting shot because they were mistaken for a gang member.”

Sure, it’s not very likely to happen, but it points to one of the underlying problems within the Deaf community: the Deaf community is extremely White. I know very few people of color or people who were born in poverty who identify themselves as Deaf rather than hearing-impaired or hard-of-hearing. Why is that? How can we change things? Personally, I’m trying to contact a variety of organizations about this issue so that we can brainstorm solutions.

I’d love to see a more diverse Deaf community and a hood/barrio where Deaf people are accepted. I don’t want to see gangs or other inner-city strife, period, but since it looks like they’ll be around for a long time to come, I want to see people in the hood/barrio who understand that Deaf people aren’t gangstas; they are simply communicating in their native language.

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  1. By Strong-ASL, I mean extremely fluid sign language spoken by a native Deaf ASL speaker, rather than the choppy Englishy stuff that some people sign. []
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Work in Progress

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Lately, some of the clients on my caseload have been more difficult to deal with, so I end up thinking about them.

So what helps me is – I plug myself into my MP3 player, then I open up Music and put on the album ‘Metropolis’ by Janelle Monae. (AKA the most amazing woman in the history of music.) Then I dance away all my worries.1

But, seriously, I’m gaining a greater and more profound appreciation for Monae. I’ve been a fan of her long before I started this roller-coaster, but I’m finding that since I began my job, I’m starting to understand her lyrics a little better. For example:

We’re dancing free but we’re stuck here underground
And everybody trying to figure they way out
Hey Hey Hey, all we ever wanted to say
Was chased erased and then thrown away
And day to day we live in a daze

-Janelle Monae, Many Moons

Metropolis is ostensibly about a dystopian future that’s like the German silent film Metropolis meets Blade Runner. In a highly stratified society, the androids are at the very bottom of the social ladder – but the androids are so advanced that they are more or less equivalent to humans at this point in the future. But, as is typical for Afrofuturistic works, there are definitely very strong parallels to today’s African-American experience. As Wikipedia puts it,

Afrofuturism is an emergent literary and cultural aesthetic that combines elements of science fiction, historical fiction, fantasy, Afrocentricity, and magic realism with non-Western cosmologies in order to critique not only the present-day dilemmas of people of color, but also to revise, interrogate, and re-examine the historical events of the past.

Please listen to her ASAP. You will not regret it.

So, I’ve talked a lot about certain minorities in this blog, but haven’t really touched upon the full range of current social justice struggles – for instance, Occupy Wallstreet is an epitomical history-making moment, but I haven’t talked about it at all in this blog. And I’ve barely even touched upon race.

Well, it just goes to show how blinding privilege is. I’m sorry, I hate it when people act all overwhelmed when they become aware of their privilege; I don’t mean to do that. But anyway. Now that I’m in my first post-college job in the social work field, I’m definitely learning a lot more about the world.

And now it’s making me ask questions and I’m ever more eager to do work with people who experience multiple minorities.

In the meantime, I’m looking for good activisty theory – think bell hooks, Julia Serano, et al. I’m gonna check out Audre Lorde – other than that, suggestions?

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  1. Disclaimer for those of you who just followed that video link to the most amazing showcase of dancing skills ever – I don’t dance that well. But I don’t care; I figure the neighbors may appreciate the entertainment of this random boy dancing while he plays with his roommate’s dog. []
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