Monthly Features


What Color are Your Friends?
Race Relations and Child’s Play
A few years ago, Kelly Johnson and Leonda Keniston met on the
playground of their children’s preschool and hit it off within the
first five minutes. They talked politics and social issues by the
slide or over the pumpkin pie at the school’s Thanksgiving party.
Later, Kelly asked Leigh to help her bring a movement called Eracism
to Richmond.
The goal of Eracism is to facilitate meaningful conversations among
people of different races so that prejudice and misunderstanding can
be erased. Trained discussion leaders moderate small-group sessions,
creating a safe haven for addressing tough questions.
Kelly worked as a lawyer and adjunct professor before staying at
home with her six children. Leigh is a sociologist currently
teaching at John Tyler Community College and is mother of three.
They sat down with Richmond Parents Monthly recently and talked
about parents, kids and race.
Kelly:
One thing that always bothered me was that my children don’t see
people of color in our house. I thought, “They’re not seeing people
in our home, which means they’re not having real relationships.” I
think change comes through real relationships.
There’s definitely racism out there, but there are a lot of people
like me. We’re not racist, but our paths don’t intersect. We’re
still living these parallel lives in Richmond and in a lot of
cities.
Leigh & Kelly
Photo Frost
When you are not engaged in real relationships with people, you live
with an ignorance you cannot escape.
Leigh: We live in a very diverse world. One of
the biggest consequences of [leading non-intersecting lives] is when
we finally get out into the world and we’re not children anymore,
our experiences are so limited in terms of dealing with people from
a different class background, a different racial background,
different nationalities—it inhibits us.
We may not know how to talk [to each other], and we may bring
stereotypes into our interactions with one another. We assume
behavior or attitudes that may not even exist.
When we don’t get together, it continues generation on generation of
ignorance.
Kelly: Do you remember that discussion we had,
about that guy who said, “Phil Donahue is my brother, Ellen
DeGeneres is my sister and Oprah is the queen”?
Leigh: I was saying to Kelly that many whites
don’t see African-Americans as a part of the family. Ellen, she’s a
part of the family, Phil is part of the family, but Oprah Winfrey is
not part of the family; she’s the queen.
Kelly: Which she is, but—
Leigh: But she’s not a part of the family. She’s
not a sister—
Kelly: —or the mother.
Leigh: A lot of people don’t consider folks who
are different from themselves as part of the one human family, their
family.
I believe in seeing the diversity around us—appreciating it,
celebrating it, in fact, and loving it. That makes us who we are as
human beings and that’s something we can pass on to our children.
What can children gain from an appreciation of diversity and from
regular, meaningful interactions with people of other races?
Leigh: My husband is white, so my children are
bi-racial. (I hate using the word, but—) We have a lot of friends
who are Iranian, Persians, white, African-American, African, from
Latin American countries. My kids have ease in interacting with
other children and adults who are different from themselves.
We’ve been around kids who have very little interaction with
children outside of their racial group and they are visibly
uncomfortable. They don’t know what to do! They don’t know how to
interact.
When you have your kids grow up playing with other children, they
don’t say, “This kid is really different from myself.” Instead, they
learn, “Oh, we both like Barbie” or, “We both like to run fast,” “We
both like to jump high.”
When you don’t have that ability to find things in common, all these
assumptions, these barriers, go up.
Kelly: I see a benefit to the world. Racism in
the sense of ignorance is so insidious. It’s a hindrance to action.
In other words, we can abide the fact that kids in the poor parts of
Richmond are primarily African-American, they have crummy schools,
they don’t have the supplies they need. Somehow we abide that here
in the West End. I think there’s an element of that when we see
children on TV who don’t look like us, who are suffering in
Afghanistan or Africa.
When you’re white and look at that and you don’t have any black
friends and you don’t have any Iranian friends, there’s that ability
in your head to have it be “them”—“those people, those people, are
really suffering, that’s not my people.”
If you have friends who are of a different race, it’s much harder to
stand by and allow injustice to continue, much harder not to show up
at a march or to vote a certain way.
It’s great with all this diversity, but the bottom line is, we’re
all souls in different bodies, we are all human beings.
Leigh: I guess for every parent that’s a real
challenge, teaching your children not to attribute certain things to
groups of people [who are different than you].
Even my own kids, they still say things, because racism is a disease
and we’re all infected by it to a greater or lesser extent. As a
parent, I feel it is my responsibility to nip it in the bud because
I don’t want meanings being created, stuff becoming attached to
whomever they’re talking about.
If there’s a Hispanic boy in my neighborhood who pushes another
child down, I don’t want my kids to say, “Hispanic kids are mean,”
and then letting it escalate from there.
Kelly: Sometimes that’s really subtle. One of my
kids—we were talking about race a few years ago—he said, “I like
black people.” And I said, “I understand your sentiment, but there’s
sort of an underlying assumption in that statement that they are a
group, separate from you, that you can like or not like.”
We tried to talk that through, because he wasn’t really getting what
I was saying, but I thought it was an important point. He would
never say that if he had friends who were black. He doesn’t say, “I
like Italian people.”
He had no personal knowledge. He hadn’t loved a friend who was of a
different color. It was still an abstract group, it was still a
group.
What do you do if you’re a parent who wants to build real
relationships for yourself and for your kids?
Kelly: There are so many ways a problem has to
be looked at and dealt with, so I don’t want to oversimplify this,
but I’m trying to look at my corner of the world, and what I can do.
I would urge parents to get the word out, “We are interested in
forming a multiracial playgroup, getting together at such-and-so
park and having our children play.”
There’s this idea: gosh, now that civil rights is here and things
are changing so much, everyone’s going to get along—. It’s not
happening. These relationships aren’t happening naturally.
The job of our generation is to find ways to make our paths cross.
To say, “This is what we’re willing to do.”
I believe there are mothers of different races who would be
interested in having playgroups, in having people in their homes of
different colors, in having a safe place to talk. That’s part of the
key, having a safe place. I ask Leigh lots of questions that are
very hard for me to ask.
Leigh: As a sociologist, I tend to be a bit more pessimistic. I
think in terms of: where do you live, how do you cross those
bridges? What incentive is there to reach out to another person? Is
it to feel good about yourself? Is it to make relationships? Are you
thinking about your children?
When I think of it, there has to be a commonality. I like the idea
of a playgroup, but you have to convince the parents to do it.
Multiracialism, just wanting to get together because we’re all
different and yet we’re all the same race, that’s not enough to keep
people together, that’s not a strong glue.
Kelly: I agree, you can come together with that
strong desire that your children learn, but ultimately you have to
like the person and feel like you have common passions.
Starting a playgroup is complicated. You’d have to make it easy—an
easy place to meet, an easy time. Maybe through sporting groups—.
I’m just trying to brainstorm here.
Leigh: It’s so hard to get people out of their
boxes. When Kelly and I started talking, it wasn’t even about race,
it was about marketing to children. So we found a common interest.
Okay, okay, here’s an idea, just talking off the top of my head. At
work, I intentionally ask people to come to my house for dinner and
that is a way—
Kelly: —You haven’t asked me to your house for
dinner.
Leigh: I know, and I’m so ashamed!
Kelly: pretends to cry
Leigh: Okay, come to my house for dinner! I have
no excuses, I’m sorry!
Kelly: Let me write that down.
Leigh: So that’s something. Invite someone you
want to get to know better, someone who’s interesting to you, into
your home.
Kelly: Or you could do a dinner party group.
Leigh: Or invite people to go see a play
together.
Kelly: It does have to start as an organized
effort of some kind, because it’s not happening on its own. Maybe
this isn’t an answer, but at least it’s a step. Maybe it will lead
to an answer.

Web Extra!
Leigh and Kelly highly recommend the article "White
Privilege: Unpacking the Invisible Backpack," by Peggy McIntosh. In
it, she discusses the ways in which white people have advantages
that they may not even recognize, such as "I can take a job as an
affirmative action employer without having co-workers on the job
suspect that I got it because of my race." You can read the
article here:
http://www.uakron.edu/centers/conflict/docs/whitepriv.pdf

Make the Paths Cross
If you’re interested in organizing a playgroup or in learning
more about or being a part of Eracism,
contact Kelly Johnson at
kellyhj@verizon.net.
For the story of Eracism’s origins in New Orleans, see
eracismneworleans.org.
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