WHY DO YOU THINK THE DEATH OF GEORGE FLOYD SPARKED THIS NATIONAL MOVEMENT?
This is different because of a combination of two things. First and foremost, it’s being filmed. We can watch the news, we can see it on our phones, on our laptops, on our iPads. We can witness a modern-day lynching being filmed, and everyone can see it in a matter of 20 minutes. I think that plays a huge role in it.
I think also the combination of the cumulative effect. People are asking themselves, how is it possible that this is happening again? In such a short time, how can what happened to Ahmaud Arbery happen again? Those two things combined has made this circumstance really different.
It’s not that racism is going worse, it’s just that it’s being filmed and the cumulative effect. How in the world does this keep happening?
WHY ARE YOU PASSIONATE ABOUT BLACK LIVES MATTER?
I feel really fortunate that, for the family I grew up in, social justice had always been talked about. My mom worked at a domestic violence shelter in Troy, which is a predominantly black neighborhood in Upstate, N.Y., for 25 years. Me and my sister, if we didn’t have a babysitter, we were going there.
My dad is a special ed teacher and a basketball coach. My sister is a middle school teacher at Hackett, a middle school in Albany, again, in a predominantly black neighborhood. My parents always talked to us about these things. I can remember all the times my mom protested. I remember her driving by herself down to Washington, D.C., to go to the Women’s March. I think it’s just something they always talked to us about.
I went to Syracuse University, and my major was Cultural Foundations in Education. That’s where I really found my passion for social justice and race. It was one thing to just learn about it, but another thing to really talk about it and experience it. I’ve been talking about this class I took in college that I just wish everybody could take. It was called Inner Group Dialogue, and it was on race and ethnicity. You had to apply to be in the class because they didn’t want anybody to look alike.
I had learned about all of this and talked about all of this, but it was the first time in my life I talked about it with no one who looked like me. It was the first time in my life that, as a white person, there was no one who looked like me all around. My teachers weren’t white. The students in my class weren’t white. That was an incredible learning experience for me.
If only everyone could take this class. Students in college and police officers and teachers and leaders and coaches.