Several pairs of eyes follow the girl as she pedals around the playground in an affluent suburb of Baltimore. But it isn't the redheaded fourth grader who seems to have moms and dads of the jungle gym nervous on this recent Saturday morning. It's the African-American man—six feet tall, bearded and wearing a gray hooded sweatshirt—watching the girl's every move. Approaching from behind, he grabs the back of her bicycle seat as she wobbles to a stop. "Nice riding," he says, as the fair-skinned girl turns to him, beaming. "Thanks, Daddy," she replies. The onlookers are clearly flummoxed.
As a black father and adopted white daughter, Mark Riding and Katie O'Dea-Smith are a sight at best surprising, and at worst so perplexing that people feel compelled to respond. Like the time at a Pocono Mountains flea market when Riding scolded Katie, attracting so many sharp glares that he and his wife, Terri, 37, and also African-American, thought "we might be lynched." And the time when well-intentioned shoppers followed Mark and Katie out of the mall to make sure she wasn't being kidnapped. Or when would-be heroes come up to Katie in the cereal aisle and ask, "Are you OK?"—even though Terri is standing right there.
Is it racism? The Ridings tend to think so, and it's hard to blame them. To shadow them for a day, as I recently did, is to feel the unease, notice the negative attention and realize that the same note of fear isn't in the air when they attend to their two biological children, who are 2 and 5 years old. It's fashionable to say that the election of Barack Obama has brought the dawn of a post-racial America. In the past few months alone, The Atlantic Monthly has declared "the end of white America," The Washington Post has profiled the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People's struggle for relevance in a changing world, and National Public Radio has led discussions questioning the necessity of the annual Black History Month. Perhaps not surprising, most white and black Americans no longer cite racism as a major social problem, according to recent polls.
“Take Back The Black Community Consciousness". It has been hijacked by embedded operatives who don't intend to develop the COMPETENCIES within. We once controlled this consciousness, focusing our activism directly upon our permanent interests. Today the "Malcolm X Political Football Game" has us as starters and some believe that this playing time translates into absolute progress for our people. My goal is to hold our permanent interests in their faces, forcing them to explain their actions.
Friday, April 24, 2009
Black Couple Adopts A White Girl
What adopting a white girl taught a black family about race in the Obama era
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3 comments:
http://finance.yahoo.com/real-estate/article/106978/America's-Most-Dangerous-Cities
Constructive feedback,I'm sending you a little article for your blog. The usual suspects are the list. I thought President Obama was going to save all black men from self-destructionl. LOL
I am on it already.
This is more than being about President Obama.
This information calls for the scrutiny of a school of assumptions that are present.
The very people who feign fear from external forces are actually forced to live among "Domestic Pirate Thugs" who assault them the most.
It is the intransigence and bigotry of certain operates that allows these statistics to go unchecked.
Don't worry - next week we will hear more mayors who reject the methodology of the study receiving air time than we will hear from those who admit that their city has a problem and they call out to the people to CHANGE THEIR WAYS so that things will improve.
My wife a I had a white foster daughter a few years back. We are both Black. In public I would get strange stares when she would call me daddy around whites in a crowd. And white people would come up and speak to the child and not me. I would stop them by taking my daughter away. I don't know where she is now, but We beleive her time in our Black home will always have good memories.
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