[EMAIL PROTECTED]
One of the clearest, most eloquent and cogent arguments for reparations I have 
ever read!


Why we owe them
by Carol Chehade

"Stop living in the past and move on after slavery!" This is what we 
often tell African Americans. Well we certainly forced them to move 
on. We moved on to Black Codes, Jim Crow, lynching, de facto 
segregation. We moved on to White knights hiding behind ghosts of 
themselves while religiously lighting crosses in praise of a Satan 
they were fooled into thinking was God. We moved on to the cities of 
Tulsa, St. Louis, and Rosewood where we, apparently, were unaffected 
by the burned and seared flesh of Black people. We moved on to laws 
that upheld racial oppression over and over again. We moved on to 
the many Black men placed on death row because they fit the 
description. We moved on and made sure that Emmitt Till would not be 
the last fourteen-year-old Black child whose unrecognizable corpse 
was the price paid for supposedly whistling at a White woman. We 
moved on to exclude African Americans from rights of democracy by 
blocking avenues to employment, education, housing, and civil 
rights. In the final decade of the last century the slow, consistent 
racial apocalypse started showing signs of even more things to come 
when a Black man's head was seen rolling behind a pick up truck in 
Jasper, Texas. By the time we racially profiled our way from Texas 
to New York we find a city plagued with plungers and forty-one 
bullets. Every time Black people have tried leaving the shackles of 
slavery behind, we find that we were the ones that couldn't stop 
living in the past. 

How dare our own racial arrogance say that reparations are too much 
of an apology for the Black lives we've tormented. How dare we 
simultaneously declare that the statue of limitations has expired 
for African Americans yet is limitless for other people in the world 
whom are non-Black. Half of the nations in this world are in the 
midst of fighting long and hard battles to get justice for things 
that happened in the past. Some of these battles have roots that go 
back further than the birth of the United States. African Americans' 
quest for justice is looked down upon in comparison to ethnic groups 
like Jews and Palestinians. Black people would be ridiculed as 
unrealistic and outlandish if they were to ask for a piece of land 
like the Jews and Palestinians have done and are doing. Unlike the 
Jews and Palestinians, at least African Americans are asking rather 
than forcing us through the barrel of a gun to take responsibility. 

The international stage has taken issues of reparations much more 
seriously than we have. The Jews received statehood as a form of 
reparations for their brothers and sisters who were exterminated. 
Coincidentally, many Jews who immigrated to Israel and benefited 
from reparations were not even close to the concentration camps of 
Auschwitz and Dachau. Although millions of those whom the 
reparations were intended for died, that didn't mean that their 
death equaled an expired statue of limitations for their descendents 
who were left to deal with the psychological consequences and the 
nagging fear of what it means to be hunted down and collectively 
violated because of ethnicity. Jews even went on to win further 
reparations through lawsuits against corporations such as banks. 
Again, these demands for justice were instigated by a generation of 
Jews whom had never even lived in Germany, let alone been there 
during the Holocaust. The Jewish experience serves as a prime 
example as to why reparations for African Americans are not 
unrealistic and outlandish. 

Another example is in Asia. There, the Japanese didn't wait until 
all of the Chinese, Korean, and Filipino survivors, who they 
enslaved during World War II, to die before settlements toward 
reparations were received. They knew, at least at an rudimentary 
level, that to deny a group justice over a given period of time, 
only to inform them that when justice finally has a forum to be 
heard that, unfortunately, their statue of limitations has expired 
is beyond cruel. 

Opponents of reparations make a very strong case when they point out 
the fact that only survivors of atrocities have received monetary 
reparations in the United States, such as survivors of the Japanese 
American internment camps and the participants of the Tuskegee 
Syphilis Study. Since slavery happened generations ago, there are no 
survivors left. Thus concluding that since there are no survivors, 
then the statue of limitations has expired. Essentially, in order to 
have a statue of limitations applied, a crime has to first be 
recognized. It was impossible for most people to recognize slavery 
as a crime back when it was practiced because the Constitution 
steadfastly protected its very existence. In fact, every racist 
practice from the Black Codes on was simply not recognized as crimes 
at the time when they were being overtly practiced. As a result of 
having an entire society interpret slaves' tears as Sambo's smile, 
slaves and their offspring were kept busy fighting to be recognized 
as human beings that they hardly had time to even think about the 
dignity reparations affords because our system rendered them without 
dignity in the first place. In essence, there was not a time in 
history where reparations could be heard because atrocities against 
African Americans were not considered crimes. 

When reparations could have still made the deadline on this 
ridiculous statue of limitations, it was immediately shot down, as 
with what happened to politician Thaddeus Stevens when he 
passionately plead on behalf of the Slave Reparation Bill of 1867. 
Whites have always had power in this country. If reparations were 
important, they could have been obtained. It is ludicrous to allow 
the same race who imposed the original limitations on Blacks to be 
allowed to enforce the time frame as to when Blacks can challenge 
past and present limitations. Ultimately, this racist inspired 
statue of limitations ran out because Whites made very sure that 
Blacks were limited in their capacity to obtain justice. By the time 
reparations for the survivors of the Japanese American internment 
camps and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study was given, grievances even 
hinting of the institutionalized support of national crimes against 
racial groups were just beginning to be acknowledged. Therefore, the 
Black experience in the Unites States is without precedent. Only 
Native Americans rank next to them in terms of the genocide that 
occurred. 

In a land littered with children of immigrants, African Americans 
are children of slaves. Therefore, the application of laws and 
rights ran in different directions for children of slaves versus 
those of immigrants. Whereas immigrants were able to build a 
foundation where wealth had the opportunity to flourish, children of 
slaves are still fighting to get half the respect that immigrants 
have received in a shorter time. Therefore, since African Americans 
have been systematically robbed and raped in various degrees of 
brutality by various White and non-Black ethnic groups, then 
reparations aren't only to be paid by Whites whose ancestors owned 
slaves, but it is also to be paid by non-Black people of color who 
are not of European descent as well. This includes my ethnic group 
of Arab Americans. Like the majority of Whites who didn't have a 
knotted family tree of slave owners, most immigrants of color also 
do not have a history in the United States of owning African 
Americans. But as non-European immigrants of color, we have made 
sure to help European Whites to tighten the rope's noose around 
Black necks. Essentially, a bystander who witnesses a crime and says 
and does nothing is as guilty as the criminal wielding the sword. 
We, as immigrants of color, rarely align ourselves with Blackness 
simply because we are too busy trying to move up the racial 
hierarchy in order to get closer to the ideal of Whiteness. 
Therefore, the mere act of supporting the racial hierarchy through 
selling our color out to the highest bidder makes us accessories to 
the crime against African Americans. 

Isn't it un-American to pay for other people's sins? Crimes against 
individuals versus crimes against a specific race require very 
different forms of punishment. For instance, if my brother raped and 
murdered a woman, then certainly it would be considered unjust to 
imprison me for his crime. Most would agree that punishment for my 
brother would either be to simply place him in prison or execute 
him. It's an easy decision to make because one, the evidence is 
obvious and two, the accused is alive. In contrast, the punishment 
for slavery is very complex. We can't place dead place people in 
prison for the rape and murder of an entire race. Although slavery 
was paradoxically both violently gory and methodically sterile, its 
aftermath needs to be paid through the same institutions that 
legally protected it. Reparations are not about retribution against 
individuals who committed a crime against other individuals. Rather, 
it is interested in seeking justice for crimes committed against a 
singled out race. Slavery and its consequences were a crime against 
humanity. The institution of slavery had nothing to do with the 
American belief in individuality. In fact slavery's collectivizing 
nature was a crime to our democracy's support of individuality. 

In the current political climate of terrorism, we have a nation 
seeking punishment against groups who vandalized our soil with 
glimpses of Hell's fire, yet we set a bad example of justice when we 
can't even apologize to the generations of African American lives 
who were oppressed by the suffocating fumes of White superiority. 
Although slavery ended with the Thirteenth Amendment, the 
consequences are around us today. The fact that reparations is an 
issue that creates deep, divided racial lines is proof as to how 
many unresolved issues are left since 1865. Our racist beliefs have 
simply metastasized with the time by further permitting us to adjust 
the depth of our perceived divine rights to believe that Black pain 
is not real enough for reparations. Let us hope that it won't take 
the same humbling experiences that Black people have continually 
faced for us to finally understand the necessity for reparations. 

Carol Chehade is an activist and writer with a new book titled, Big 
Little White Lies: Our Attempt to White-Out America. Further 
information can be found at www.nehmarchepublishing.com.

Copyright © 2005 Carol Chehade 

http://www.reparationsthecure.org/articles/chehade1.shtml 

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