August 08, 2008

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Becoming AWARE

"The idea of an all-white group still evokes images of Ku Klux Klan meetings and it just sounds weird to some people."

By Clare Robbins

Listen to this Commentary!

What happens when a group of young white people get together to talk about racial issues? The concept is catching on in places like Los Angeles, where high school students recently started an awareness group for white kids on campus. Youth Radio's Clare Robbins explains why some white teens and young adults, including herself, are separating themselves to talk honestly about the role that race plays in their lives. (November 11 on KPCC)


People get funny looks on their faces when I talk about the group I’m in. I’m a part of an awareness group for white people. The idea of an all-white group still evokes images of Ku Klux Klan meetings, and it just sounds weird to some people.

Explaining it to others isn’t always easy. sixteen-year-old Joelle Broffman has to do it all the time.

JOELLE (on tape)
My friend, he’s Armenian, and he asked me the other day what we talk about... I said we talk about white privilege... But when I first said that before I was even done, I saw a whole change in his face and I was like, “Oh shoot, I have to finish before he gets the wrong idea."

CLARE
Joelle finds herself having this conversation often these days. She’s helping to form a new white awareness group at Cleveland High School. So far about 30 students participate. Most have completed a unique unit on race and racism, and want a space to keep that conversation alive, outside the classroom.

But why for white people only? Students say it’s hard to be really honest about racism in their lives when there are students of color in the room.

For many students at Cleveland High School, it’s taken a while to even identify as white. That’s because many of them are Jewish. Sixteen-year- old Will Leivenburg says his parents do support his newfound passion for anti-racism, but they don’t always agree with him. Like the one time they made a joke about a Latino person on TV.

WILL (on tape)
I was like, "But you can never understand what they go through." And then they were like, "Okay, how about this Will? They can never understand what Jews go through." And I was like, "Listen... Okay?" And then I was about to explain to them the fact that Jews can hide themselves, and hide their religion because of white privilege, they can change their names if they want to, y’know... And that was one more thing that created a little bit of tension between my parents and I.

CLARE
Generational differences have played out very differently for Debbie Winters and her daughter Lisa. Lisa graduated from Cleveland last year, and around that time started actively attending AWARE meetings. Lisa tells her mom that she didn’t think her parents would understand her new activity.

Lisa (on tape)
I was very private about it, I didn’t want you to know...

Debbie (on tape)
I think it's true, you were private at first and I didn't really know what you were doing. But then you started getting more comfortable and you started buying us books. And then it was like, "Wait, I’m so comfortable that I want to share this..."

CLARE
When Lisa’s home on her college break, she finds her parents are just as active in the AWARE meetings as she is.

Back at Cleveland High School, there are still a number of white students who say they’d never join a group like AWARE. Some of them don’t believe white privilege even exists, or that racism is a big problem today. Others told me they are dedicated to being colorblind, and an all-white anti-racist group is a step backwards, not forwards.

Now, you might think this is all very ‘LA’ But these groups exist all over the country. There’s even a national gathering called the White Privilege Conference that’s celebrating its seventh year. The gathering includes multi-cultural and white groups like AWARE.

This year’s target audience? Young people.


White students at Cleveland High in Los Angeles meet weekly in AWARE meetings to confront racism in their lives. Check out the AWARE website for more information!
Credit: Jason David and Clare Robbins


White Privilege: A right, advantage, or immunity granted to or enjoyed by white persons beyond the common advantage of all others; an exemption in many particular cases from certain burdens or liabilities.
Source: White Privilege


QUESTION:
What does white privilege mean to you?

Jazmine Livingston, 18, thinks, "White privilege is a cop-out..."


Ben Frost, 23, says, "Knowing that I was supposed to apply to college...is a manifestation of [white privilege]..."


Sophie Simon-Ortiz, 19, thinks, "White privilege is a sense of entitlement..."


Kareem Chadley, 24, says, "For me, the term raises red flags..."



Source: National White Privilege Conference

Academics from the Bush School of Education in Seattle, WA, just held the seventh annual White Privilege Conference. This four-day excursion features panel discussions, workshops, and keynote speakers dedicated to exploring and deconstructing concepts of white privilege; as well as other concepts, including advantages that come with gender and sexual orientation.

Check out their comprehensive video to learn more!


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