The Future of Racial Identity Politics:
If Whites Would Simply Allow Blacks To Develop
Self-esteem, Race War Would Become Unnecessary
18 August 2012
By Karin Friedmann
Racial difference was probably the most motivating
force of 20th Century history, culminating in many
racial genocides, two world wars, the American civil
rights movement and the end of South African
apartheid. There were various political movements that
took place then, such as the Pan-African and Pan-Arab
movements, which eventually morphed into a global
Pan-Islamic movement, while European nationalist
movements such as National Socialism eventually
morphed into Zionism.
Widespread popular sentiment has diminished the value
of Euro-America and Europe, classifying the former
world powers collectively as a dying empire with low
population growth. The mystery remains whether race
wars will decide the fate of nations, or whether the
keys to our cities will be handed over to the
non-Europeans in an organized, educational and
peaceful manner.
In the 21st Century, Americans have attained a certain
legal equality on paper while social reform slowly
progresses. However, despite the "code of
color-blindness" usually enforced by upper-class
liberal academic circles, racial identity seems to be
just as important in our time. It is my hope that as
our current century progresses, this time our
motivation will be towards good not evil.
The two leading global competitors for both population
growth and interracial cooperation are Islam and
Catholicism, while locally, secular mainstream media's
promotion of interracial dating has resulted in our
kindergarten classrooms looking much different than
they did fifty years ago. Yet, it is not clear to me
that we have moved beyond the Us vs. Them mentality.
Even though American mosques are probably the most
racially diverse places you will ever find for human
fellowship, I have always been startled again and
again that no matter what city I'm in, the second
question after "What's your name?" is "Where are you
from?" While I know that God created us into nations
and tribes in order that we may know each other, it
never c3eases to amaze me how quickly the question
comes up.
If I say I'm from Michigan, I'll be classified as a
generic "white" person, so sometimes I want to explain
that my parents were immigrants and that I too spent
the first 20 years of my life trying to figure out how
to fit in with American culture and the next 20 years
coping with the realization that it's never going to
happen. But I have found that explaining that I'm
Swiss only adds to the confusion.
I have had moments of feeling silently offended by
Egyptian youngsters, who identified as Egyptian even
if they were born in the US, labeling me as a "white"
person, even though they were in many ways more
assimilated than me! And I have come to shrink from
the typical role of white women in the interracial
mosque atmosphere, which has emerged as a sort of
backlash against the stereotypical "Monica" depiction
of white women in the media.
If you want to know who the white American converts
are in any mosque, they are usually the ones wearing
the most clothes. They are like the nuns of the
Islamic movement. They often make the Asian, Arabic
and African women uncomfortable with their exaggerated
displays of piety. I was one of them once, and the
reason was because I didn't know what else to do. If
the leadership asked me to give a talk in front of the
congregation, I'd do it even though I'm naturally shy.
If they asked me to visit women's prisons to do some
ministry I'd do it from the love of my heart. But I
also realized that the reason they were asking me was
because no one else would do it, because it's not
traditionally appropriate for a woman to be doing all
this volunteer work outside of her home. It was a very
bizarre situation to be stuck in! Why couldn't I be
the woman with the eyeliner and the great shoes who
just shows up on Eid? No matter how much volunteer
work I did, I'd never fit in because my sincerity just
made people uncomfortable. Then I learned the "show a
little hair" trick.
This is just a single example of a white person trying
to negotiate her place in this confusing world, but
even among Christians it has become a real issue of
discussion. The white population is simply not
reproducing itself, largely due to cultural factors,
so those blue-eyes who remain among us are
experiencing what it's like to be a minority in the
US.
While race advocates have expressed dismay that
because the educated classes of white people use birth
control, the only white people who are having babies
are the stupid ones, who have babies by mistake, often
out of wedlock. Popular media erodes the morality of
white women, portraying them as blonde bimbos ready to
trade their virtue for an alcoholic drink. Due to such
stereotyping, white women face the threat of
molestation or worse any time they travel abroad;
meanwhile the US invasion of Kosova and Bosnia has
resulted in a huge CIA sponsored business of
kidnapping and trafficking white women as sex slaves
in Israel and elsewhere.
As far as I know, nobody in my family ever enslaved,
invaded or harmed black people in any way. Yet it may
be hard for a lot of people to even sympathize with
innocent white people, especially given the
traditional American education, which casts group
blame on an entire skin tone for the actions of very
specific groups.
Malcolm X once stated that if whites would simply
allow blacks to develop self-esteem, race war would
become unnecessary. Half a century later, whites
themselves have become demoralized and hopeless.
Ultimately, what is probably needed is a Pan-European
movement to increase the self-esteem of the new
minority, which might eventually morph into the
Pan-Islamic movement. When white people understand the
value of what God gave them in their DNA, they will
embrace peace.