This happens within the same few days of the video of the Black Chicago teenager, Laquan McDonald being shot 16 times by Chicago Police Officer was released. This is the same video that they tried to keep a secret, that people said the boy was probably in the wrong and deserved it. This is the same video that brings fear and anger into the eyes of any one who watches it. Fear that are children will never be more that a skin color that is not wanted, the fear that it may one day be the image or video of one of our children who's body lays out on the cold ground as life slips from its grips. As his body hit the ground in the video and his body jerks, I think of the pain his family will never be able to forget. The snatching of a life that his fellow brothers experienced decades ago in lynch crimes. Crimes against those who skin color was deemed inappropriate and whose body burned and hung fighting the wind through the night into the morning sun. it combined with Jill Scott's chilling performance left goosebumps on my body.
"Strange Fruits", originally started as a poem by a white Jewish poet by the name of Abel Meeropol, but once Billie Holiday got her hands onto it, the master piece had yet another greater purpose. Decades later, and it is still one of the most powerful, Black movement songs to date. A song about pain, struggle, and the reality of so many people in the 20th century. Women, Men and Children lives taken from them, and left to be stripped of their pride, and lives to be just bodies with untold stories that never will be completed, just bodies swinging from trees for the amusement of cowards.
Jill Scott along with other popular artist such as Pharell Williams, Ed Sheeran, Jamie Foxx, Pink Alicia Keys, John Legend, Miguel, and a few more great artist performed to address and bring awareness to racial inequality. The racial inequity that plagues America. The racial inequality that forces parents to teach their children that their lives are precious but could end in any moment simply for the melanin tied into their bodies. I rented a book in my sophomore year of college at Clark Atlanta University called Lynching in America, I needed the book to do a research paper on laws and codes such as slave codes, Jim crow and any others that Black men and women were forced to accept during any period of time within the U.S., not forgetting to mention Black incarceration rates and methods of punishment for Black people in the 19th and 20th Century, as well as in the present day. I then stumbled upon a book called The New Jim Crow, which was authored by the brilliant Michelle Alexander and she describes the way the system has been fixed to redesign racial caste systems in America. This book made me question if the "system" would ever be able to be fixed. A question, that still goes unanswered. Just another question drifting into the breeze, just another body lost to violence, just another person lost to racial inequality...
There is so much one could say, and only a small piece of the pie would be tasted. These issues happening within one community is devastatingly painful but doesn't prevent the issues from being none the less real.
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