Black Lives Matter Historically and Locally

The essence of the broader Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement stems from the enduring struggle the Black community in the United States faces in response to violent systematic racism. BLM as a social movement takes inspiration from the ideologies of queer and Black activists such as those in the Civil Rights movement and the Stonewall riots. The three essential women of colour organizers of the original Black Lives Matter movement were Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi (Global BLM 2015). They organized in 2013 in response to the acquittal of Trayvon Martin’s murderer, George Zimmerman. Zimmerman fatally shot 17 year old Trayvon Martin while on neighborhood watch, after perceiving Trayvon as a threat despite evidence of him being unarmed and not threatening (Global BLM 2015). In the aftermath of the tragedy, George Zimmerman was acquitted for murder, sparking outrage against the state-permitted violence against people of colour. This devastating saga reignited the necessity of a movement that calls out the institutional racism and prejudiced police brutality Black folks experience. The continued deadly police brutality that took the lives of many, including: Tamir Rice, Tanisha Anderson, Mya Hall, Walter Scott, Sandra Bland and many other victims, encouraged the political intervention of BLM due to the systematic targeting (Global BLM 2015).

The movement grounds itself in queer of colour theory by centering conversations around the disproportionate violence that Black women and Black trans women experience. The militarized police response to the 2014 Ferguson protests, for the brutal murder of Mike Brown by police officer Darren Wilson, was a larger scale reiteration of the institutional violence to which Black communities are subject. The state-sanctioned use of tear gas and pepper spray against BLM organizers illuminates the ways in which the justice system violently treats people of colour. After this event, the organizers of BLM inspired activists to introduce chapter organizations in cities across America, and now the globe. The rising number of Black folks killed by police officers in the U.S. has, and continues to, stir communities to seek an end to state-sanctioned, racist violence. This has resulted in the proliferation of BLM chapters in most major cities across the U.S., as well as in Canada, Australia, Brazil, South Africa, the U.K. and many more (Christi, 2016). Black Lives Matter came to Vancouver in March of 2016 in order to draw attention to the violence endured by invisible Black communities in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, as well as to organize in solidarity with other chapters across North America (Vancouver BLM, 2016). The reach of the BLM movement is unlimited and global, because it addresses the problem of systematic police brutality that is faced by people of colour everywhere. In this way, the non-local BLM movement inspired local activism and organizing, in support of a community otherwise rendered invisible and subject to state violence.

In discussing the history of Vancouver’s chapter of Black Lives Matter, it is vital to mention the significance of Hogan’s Alley. Hogan’s Alley, a neighbourhood bordering Vancouver’s Chinatown and Japantown, was destroyed in 1970 as per the construction of the Georgia Viaduct. Prior to its dismantling, this neighbourhood was home to many black families, businesses, and a church. In the context of the Black Lives Matter Vancouver chapter, the history of erasure and displacement of Black bodies in Vancouver cannot be ignored. The dispossession of the Black community living in Hogan’s Alley was just one step in this erasure, along with the erasure of Black citizenship from the public conscious. While it is by no means correct, there is often the assumption that very few black people live in Vancouver or the surrounding Lower Mainland. This ideology detaches the diverse experiences of Greater Vancouver’s black population, and further, overlooks the occurrence of anti-Black police brutality, and the larger anti-Black actions existing in Vancouver. While the elimination of Hogan’s Alley is a shameful part of our history, discourse in Vancouver must recognize the continued erasure, displacement and marginalization of Black people today.

Moreover, the Vancouver chapter of Black Lives Matter takes into consideration their presence on unceded, Indigenous territory. This recognizes that the displacement of people out of Hogan’s Alley is only one narrative of Canada’s larger history of displacement of Indigenous folks, as well as marginalization of minority/migrant communities. In its formation, Black Lives Matter Vancouver addressed the historical and present violence against Indigenous and Black, specifically queer and trans, bodies enacted by the police.

In addition to addressing the connections between Vancouver’s histories of systematically oppressing and erasing Black lives, it is also necessary make connections to other organizations (which do not necessarily have ties to Vancouver) that emphasize mobilizing and organizing Black feminist activisms, such as the Combahee River Collective. It is another group of Black feminists who have been working towards defining the group itself and their interaction with other organizations and movements. Black Lives Matter has commonalities with the Combahee River Collective—in committing to work against oppressions concerning race, gender, sexuality, class, and especially how they work together to affect marginalized groups. BLM Vancouver’s statement on their chapter website specifically state that they aim to “centre the voices of Black folks as well as other folks of colour and hope to lift up those who are queer, women, trans, differently abled, poor, or otherwise marginalized” (Vancouver BLM, 2016). It is pertinent to note that, though BLM has been critiqued for its emphasis on Black lives and has been retorted with “All Lives Matter”, their statement reflects how BLM has never been about valuing only Black Lives. Rather, it is a recognition of those who have been traditionally and systematically devalued, allowing the voices that have been silenced or ignored to be heard—especially those of Black lives because this organization is founded by Black feminists. This statement includes a variety of identities that address not only race, but gender, sexuality, class, able-bodiedness, and other marginalizations, because these are intersections that co-exist rather than categories to which an individual can only belong singularly. One can contend that “all lives matter,” but this is in fact not the case, as is reflected in legislations, statistics, and other experiences that may have gone undocumented. Through law humans may be formally recognized as equal, yet groups like BLM challenge the inequalities that do indeed occur. The Combahee River Collective ends their statement by saying that they “know that [they] have a very definite revolutionary task to perform and [they] are ready for the lifetime of work and struggle before [them]” (Combahee River Collective, 1982, 281). This illustrates how the political work done by activists is part of a larger, broader process. It is a journey, it takes time, and most of all, it takes work.

 

References:

Christi, Jeyolyn. “The International Reach of Black Lives Matter.” NAOC, 2016, natoassociation.ca/the-international-reach-of-black-lives-matter/.

global, BLM 2015. blacklivesmatter.com/about/herstory/.

Combahee River Collective. (1982). The Combahee River Collective statement. In Smith, Barbara (ed.), Home girls: a Black feminist anthology, pp. 264-274.

Vancouver, BLM. “About Us.” Black Lives Matter Vancouver, 15 July 2016, blacklivesmattervancouver.com/about-us/.

Black Lives Matter Vancouver and Toronto

Black Lives Matter Vancouver:

Cicely-Belle Blain co-founder of BLM Vancouver states that when Black Lives Matter is written about in mainstream and independent media, the point is usually completely missed (The Built Environment, 2016). This is because “‘mainstream media’ usually just means white media — as in, media written BY white people, FOR white people (The Built Environment, 2016). Rather than try to make ‘mainstream’ sound neutral, call it the ‘whitestream media. For instance, one of the mainstream media columns was are informed by a racist climate of white supremacy that requires black communities and black activism to be constructed as dangerous and disruptive (The Built Environment, 2016). Another depicted the organization as disruptive by questioning if, it was only Black lives that mattered. It further states that “Black Lives Matter” is a phrase that almost always fuels controversy and a wide range of heated reactions (The Built Environment, 2016). This is a reminder that the media is controlled by whiteness and therefore like its audience, it expresses white fragility. As a result, although racism is central the Black lives, this is not considered a factor, since everything is viewed through colour-blind racism (The Built Environment, 2016).

Blain opposes the co-optation of black experiences by white media-makers/writers and shares the specific strategies that they and the BLMV team have used in resistance (The Built Environment, 2016). This involves delving into historical research, to sharing Instagram memes, to building visible community presence through photography/video, to learning from the institutional experiences of academics of colour at the University of British Columbia (The Built Environment, 2016).

In addition, the movement deconstructs documentaries, like “Do Not Resist”, winner of best documentary of the 2016 Tribeca Film Festival (The Built Environment, 2016). This film is a depiction of the militarization of the local police departments since 9/11 (The Built Environment, 2016). As it relates to Vancouver, this medium signify the policing, suppression and dismantling of Black voices like those of Hogan’s Alley. Similarly it is an illustration of the many in which law enforcement police and control Aboriginal bodies, particularly in marginalized zones such as the Downtown Eastside. As well as the surveillance of brown bodies who occupy the space of the stranger, threat, and by extension (The Built Environment, 2016) the monstrous, Muslim terrorist (Puar & Rai, 2002).

Black Lives Matter Toronto:

Janaya Khan, one of the co-founders of Black Lives Matter Toronto states that the Canadian police, media, and society at large are inundated with anti-black racism. In addition, the movement is perceived by the media as a social, systemic, structural power because it challenges the homonormativity of the white queer community and mainstream Canada (Maclean’s, 2016). Both the Vancouver and Toronto chapters of Black Lives Matter opposed police presence in Pride parades with regards to racialized police brutality, but white Queer people benefit from police presence and inclusion in Pride parades because it assists in achieving homonormativity (Agathangelou et al., 2008). The “good” white Queer citizen can gain institutional acceptance by distancing themselves from and erasing Queer people of colour, posing as citizens on the same side of privileged white heterosexual people, emphasising the benefits of their whiteness and denouncing the detriments of their Queerness (Agathangelou et al., 2008). Because Queer activism is mobilized through homonormativity, Pride parades are restricted in what type of activism, and what type of Queer people, can be used in demonstrations. Thus, “freedom depends on the (re)founding of unfreedoms” (Agathangelou et al., 2008, 131). While Pride parades are designed to challenge heteronormativity, in practice, they actually normalise homonormativity, which then leads to homonationalism (Puar, 2007, in Greensmith & Giwa, 2013).

Extending upon homonationalistic discourse, many Queer activisms have a goal of obtaining social rights and acceptances through assimilation into current social structures, which leaves behind more vulnerable group members, such as Queer people of colour (Cohen, 1997). Similarly, immigrated citizens are forced to assume a lifestyle that benefits the market and values of economy (Ferguson, 2003). Who is deserving of inclusion and acceptance is dependent on the enhanced or subdued ability of citizens to assimilate in and adapt to cultural norms, which Aihwa Ong (1999) called “variegated citizenship” (in Chávez, 2010, p. 138). Therefore, both Queer people and migrant people challenge and threaten “family values” and the familial status quo, and they are often cited as the source of a multitude of social problems, such as the marriage crisis (Chávez, 2010).

Furthermore, when queerness becomes inherently radical and taken up my white discourses of oppression, queer people are imagined as white, and Black/other people of colour are imagined as homophobic and backwards due to their race/religion, banishing queer people of colour from mainstream queer activism (Bacchetta, El-Tayeb & Haritaworn, 2015; Haritaworn, Tauqir, & Erdem, 2008).  Additionally, these imaginations can perpetuate the “dual process of incorporation and quarantining” (Puar & Rai, 2002), which also erases people of colour from Queer activism. Rather than focusing on the binary of heterosexual/Queer, Queer activism should pay attention to the varying identities within the Queer community, regarding race, class, and gender (Cohen, 1997). Consequently, the Pride parade  as a form of queer activism serves to promote the social visibility of Queer people through occupying space, and a person’s representation in a Pride parade relies on “commercialism and commodification of identities,” (Enguix, 2009, p. 24). Sonia E. Alvarez (1997) writes about the “NGOinization” of social movements (including Pride), which describes how these movements rely on corporate funding for mobilization (in Agathangelou et al., 2008). In this way, social movements backed by socially marginalized groups are forced to coincide with global capitalist relations to eliminate their own social marginalization. Pride parades emphasise consumption and, as a result, racialized Queer people and Queer people of low socioeconomic status are underrepresented (for example, because they cannot afford elaborate costumes, cannot take time off from work to participate, or because they cannot/refuse to support capitalism; Greensmith & Giwa, 2013). With regards to the BLM movement being viewed as social, systematic, structural power, this is due to the fact there is the perception that it bullied Pride and it hijacked the parade. This is unfortunate because the entity consists of a group of marginalized individuals whose mandate is to defend disenfranchised groups against the police and racism. Additionally the use of languages such as “bullies” and “hijackers” regarding the organisation, by multiple mainstream media is problematic and dangerous. This is bearing in mind that Blacks already live in cultural and institutional racism. Additionally, whites who opposes the authorities are not associated with such languages. Therefore the media is displaying anti-black practices (The Globe and Mail, 2016).

In another aspect, blackness as deviating from normality relates to the grand discourse of anti-Black racism through representation within media as spoken about by Khan of Black Lives Matter. Khan documents the fact that between 2005 and 2015 the federal black inmate population grew by 69% (Maclean’s, 2016). This is the fastest growth rate of any group including Aboriginals. What is more startling is that the Black populations makes up 2.9% of the population yet there is a 10% inmate representation in the federal prison (Maclean’s, 2016). Some these “inmates” are immigrants who arrive in Canada to visit their family member but they do not fit nation-state’s definition of a moral and good citizen. And therefore begs the question who is allowed to enter the border of the state and who belongs.  As a result they are detained in jail awaiting a decision by the courts.  It is for this reason that the organization speaks for Blacks and Aboriginal because their issues are intrinsically linked (Maclean’s, 2016). For example, on April 2016 First Nations communities “occupied the offices of Canada’s Indigenous Affairs Department to demand action over suicides as well as water and housing crises in their communities” (Democracy Now, 2016). These series of protests took place days after “the Cree community of Attawapiskat declared a state of emergency over attempted suicides” (Democracy Now, 2016). These protests were not constrained to one region in Canada, but were “set-up occupations inside and outside the offices of Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada in Toronto, Regina, Winnipeg and Gatineau, Quebec” (Democracy Now, 2016). Black Lives Matter activists stood in solidarity with Indigenous protectors, after just weeks earlier launching their “15-day encampment outside police headquarters following news there would be no criminal charges for the police officer who fatally shot a South Sudanese refugee named Andrew Loku” that last July (Democracy Now, 2016). First Nations activists also showed up in solidarity, standing alongside BLM and their allies, in the same place Indigenous activists show up each year to protest the state and police complicity within the devastating issues surrounding the systematic ignoring of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls (Democracy Now, 2016). To comprehend the relevance of Indigeneity and Indigenous resistant and sovereignty within the BLM movement, there must be an understanding that BLM organizes with the comprehension that they do so on stolen and often unceded Native lands. In addition, the police brutality and state sanctioned violence which targets Black/ Muslim and non-Muslim bodies, stems from the same institutions which developed policing as a way to guard the colonial state (Democracy Now, 2016). This form of colonial-stemmed policing ensured that Indigenous folks did not leave the locales of reserves and that the settlers would be so-called “protected” from the savage Others (Democracy Now, 2016). The struggle of deportation, Islamophobia, badge accompanied gun violence which hovers over Black trans, queer and cis bodies is parallel to the state sanctioned horrors faced by Indigenous folks who are attacked by swat police when protecting their waters/ lands from pipelines and corporations, and the passing off of murdered and missing loved ones. Black and Indigenous struggles therefore are intrinsically interlocked, making this relationship the core of the BLM’s politics of resistance and struggle on stolen lands.

 

Work Cited:

Agathangelou, A. M., Bassichis, M. D., & Spira, T. L. (2008). Intimate investments: Homonormativity, global lockdown, and the seductions of empire. Radical History Review, 100, 120-43.

Alvarez, S. E. (1997). Latin American feminisms ‘go global’: Trends of the 1990s and challenges for the new millennium. Cultures of Politics/Politics of Cultures: Revisioning Latin American Social Movements. S. E. Alvarez, E. Dagnino, & A. Escobar (Eds.). Boulder: Westview.

Bacchetta, P., El-Tayeb, F. & Haritaworn, J. (2015). Queer of colour formations and translocal spaces in Europe. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 33(5), 769-78.

Chávez, K. R. (2010). Border (in)securities: Normative and differential belonging in LGBTQ and immigrant rights discourse. Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies, 7(2), 136-155.

Cohen, C. J. (1997). Punks, bulldaggers, and welfare queens: The radical potential of Queer politics? Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, 3, 437-65.

Democracy Now.(n.d.). Occupied Canada: Indigenous & Black Lives Matter Activists Unite to Protest Violence & Neglect. Retrieved November 25, 2017, from https://www.democracynow.org/2016/5/20/occupied_canada_indigenous_black_lives_matter

Enguix, B. (2009). Identities, sexualities, and commemorations: Pride parades, public space and sexual dissidence. Anthropological Notebooks, 15(2), 15-33.

Ferguson, R. A. (2003). Introduction: Queer of colour critique, historical materialism, and canonical sociology. In Aberrations in Black: Toward a Queer of Colour Critique. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Greensmith, C. & Giwa, S. (2013). Challenging settler colonialism in contemporary Queer politics: Settler homonationalism, Pride Toronto, and Two-Spirit subjectivities. American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 37(2), 129-48.

Haritaworn, J., Tauqir, T., & Erdem, E. (2008). Gay imperialism: Gender and sexuality discourse in the ‘war on terror’. In Out of Place: Interrogating Silences in Queerness/racialiality. A. Kuntsman & E. Miyake (Eds.). York: Raw Nerves Books.

Ong, A. (1999). Flexible Citizenship: The Cultural Logics of Transnationality. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Puar, J. K. (2007). Terrorist assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer times. I. Grewal, C. Kaplan, & R. Wiegman (Eds.). Durham, NC: Duke University Press.

Puar, J. K. & Rai, A. (2002). Monster, terrorist, fag: The war on terrorism and the production of docile patriots. Social Text, 72(20), 117-48.

Schwartz, Z. (2017, July 06). How Black Lives Matter co-founder Janaya Khan sees Canada. Retrieved November 25, 2017, from http://www.macleans.ca/news/canada/how-black-lives-matter-co-founder-janaya-khan-sees-canada/  

The Built Environment. (n.d.). TALKING BACK: How whitestream media f*cks up when talking about Black Lives Matter. Retrieved November 25, 2017, from http://www.mediacoop.ca/audio/talking-back-how-whitestream-media-fcks-when-talki/36096

 

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