Before
I start my post for the night I want to preface it with a few things:
1) I’m Black (I grew up in the 70s.
African-American may be good for the majority… but I’m Black).
2) As a result, there’s not much that I
have felt up until this point that I could learn about prejudice. With
that, my thoughts on the topic have been about how people view me, less about
how I view them… them being Anglo-Americans.
3) I’m not typically one to talk about
social politics with people outside of my race.
So
what I’m about to blog about is really about the experience and resulting
personal introspection that this trip has caused that has broadened how I think
about prejudice and how even one such as I can exhibit this nasty trait… and
need to grow.
Yesterday,
March 14th, we visited the Habib Hospital in a predominantly Islamic
neighborhood in Mumbia. There I was, the lone black guy, with a
group of 30 plus Anglo-Americans walking through a neighborhood of people that
potentially hate us… or so the media tells us. I can’t convey how
uncomfortable and how unsafe I felt. “What are they thinking? Why are
they looking at us like that? Will they hurt us? Will they riot? Will someone
see this as an opportunity to make a name for themselves by confronting or
hurting one of us?” These were all of the things that I felt. I
watched how they glared at us; how some whispered. My feelings were very
subtle, but nevertheless they were there.
I
have to say that I’m ashamed of how I felt. How could I project such
negative and stereotypically thoughts on the local population? Could it
be that they were just curious about these people whom just stepped off of a
gigantic bus (a vehicle, mind you, that they probably don’t see every day) and
were wondering “who are they”? Could it be that they were probably just
curious about what people who obviously weren’t a part of the community were
doing there? Maybe they were just thinking “Who are they and why are they
here”? Maybe it was the fact that we were all decked out in suits and
neckties in 80+-degree weather? How could I, as one who has often walked
through a “majority environment” as the sole person of color, feeling out of
place and wondering about other’s potential prejudices and praying not to be
mistreated, project such negative thinking on these people?
My
understanding of the primary goal of the Capstone project and the trip to an
international location is to help us understand that doing business globally
does not equate to doing business in the U.S. We’ve been brought here to
gain the understanding that there are different mores, norms, policies, and
laws that will affect how you do business in the global community. But
the learning I gained has been much greater and much more personal. I too
have prejudices that I need to examine. Race and cultural differences
are, for the most part, discussed in the U.S. from either the perspective of
Black and White, Citizens versus Illegals, or more recently, Muslim versus
non-Muslim. I’ve felt as though I know enough about the first, and that
issues of the latter really won’t affect me personally but present a greater
threat to my country. But being immersed in an environment that forced my
personal, and until know, quietly held prejudices to the surface has caused me
to re-examine my thoughts about the topic. Until now, I subconsciously
felt like the victim. This has highlighted for me that I can also be the
oppressor, that I have information and a set of beliefs that shape how I see
others, that those sets of data need to be challenged, and that I need to more
exposure to cultures other than Black-White-Latino-Asian America.
I
don’t know that I would take you through the full extent of the soul searching
that is forcing. But I am happy that participation in a
program like Boston University’s EMBA and its international component have
exposed me to something that has led to more than the professional growth that
I expected. It has highlighted the need for me to expand my personal
boundaries, experiences, and thinking to expose me to the world beyond the
U.S. I see that I need to gain a better understanding of people other
than those I am familiar with, to understand their beliefs and how that affects
their lives, how that makes us similar or not, and then synthesize all of this
to grow, not only as a professional, but as a person.
1 comment:
James, you provide a unique perspective and our class is much richer because of it. Thanks for being open and willing to share your insights with us.
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