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Sunday, September 2, 2012

A Plea to Engage in Racial Reconciliation (Part 1)

Please welcome guest blogger Grace Biskie, who serves with IVCF's Black Campus Ministries and blogs at Gabbing with Grace. Her post on racial reconciliation origionally appeard on Rachel Held Evens's blog

I grew up in a home where my older, white brother called me a "stupid little n****r" more times than I can count, and where I countered with "ignorant, loser honkey!" more times than I care to admit. My brother had grown up in an all white neighborhood until White Flight swept through in a little under two years. He was thrust into being the only white kid among black kids who stole his bike and beat him up. Outnumbered on the streets, he took it out on me at home.
I learned from blacks, at a very early age, that whites were manipulative, selfish, always out for "their damn selves" and NOT to be trusted. I learned from whites, at a very early age, that blacks were violent, stupid, unacceptable human beings who were less important than themselves and most of all, "not safe." I learned these things from my family, my church, my friends’ parents, and my private, Christian school. The racism was across the board. It came not only from the "poor folks of Detroit,” but from the Christians, the Muslims, the poor, the rich, the educated, even the homeless. It seemed like everyone had a bad opinion about white, blacks, or Arabs.
Eventually, the racism swirling around me became a part of what I believed to be true about the world: a few whites were great, most were tolerable, and the rest deplorable. These “truths” were seared into my brain like a brand on a baby cow. I'd been branded with racism.
Things came to a head for me on September 11, when I blamed the events of the day entirely on whites. The more whites talked, cried, formed prayer circles and sang Kumbaya, the more a war raged in my heart against them. It doesn't matter who flew the planes, they were provoked! By white people!
Then God began a slow and gentle process of healing that started with acknowledging the pain and devastation whites had caused in my life growing up. After many years of prayer, journaling, therapy and relationships, I was delivered from years of racism—my own and the racism of others against me. And yes, I came to see the events of 9-11 much differently.
But this is who I am: I am racially, culturally, spiritually, physically, ethnically black AND white. As an American Christian trying to live in the tension, I am as screwed as it gets. If there was a club for confused mixed kids, I’d be captain, head of the Department for the Racially Insane. For shits and giggles, God brought me a white husband. I'm a biracial woman who identifies as African-American. I grew up in Detroit, among urban, working-class blacks while my white mother sent me to a suburban, lily white, private Christian school and a large, white Baptist Church who denied me baptism in 1987 for being "half-black." Later that year, they passed a vote in which blacks were allowed baptism and therefore membership. The pastor who vehemently fought for me and other blacks to become members was maligned by his elder board and fired. Later, he committed suicide.  
For all these reasons and more, I have been unable to disengage with the racial issues that plague Christians in our country... (continue to part two)

6 comments:

  1. Thanks so much for sharing this story! Looking forward to Wednesday

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  2. Wow...I am so sorry for the pain and brokenness you experienced in your life. Thanks for sharing part 1...looking forward to part 2.

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  3. your welcome! thank you for journeying with me!

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  4. I must say, I'm diggin' the Camp Kumbaya & Confused Club pics you added. Nice touch! Thanks again for having my story!

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  5. haha! IKR! I have to say, I was pleased with the 'Dr. Who' touch...

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