Professor George Yancy wrote an op-ed in the NYTimes entitled, Dear White People. It was essentially an open letter to white people, a ‘gift’ he called it, for white folk to take an honest and no doubt painful look at how their whiteness continues to feed the monster of white supremacy. And so this slim volume is an exploration of the backlash he received via the responses to his ‘gift.’
Professor Yancy maintains he was fully aware of how white people would respond, though by his writing it feels like he was shocked into another level of awareness that clearly he wasn’t all that prepared for. He was truly shaken by the intensity and vitriol of white reaction to a very benign, albeit bold letter. He details in this slim volume the excerpts from many of those who reached him via email, snail mail and voice mail.
There were death threats, the copious use of the N-word, comparisons to animals, etc. All this over a letter that was offered as a gift with love simply seeking a little reciprocity in asking one to be vulnerable. It is frightful to read some of the feedback, but it’s not a fright born of fear, but one of disgust. George Yancy asks the white reader to shoulder some of this pain, requesting they take all this in and sit with it and empathize with how he must feel.
He suggests that his personal pain is just a microcosm of what Black people experience daily as they move through life. How does whiteness affect Blackness? How does implicit bias impact the Black body and psyche? It “feels as if Black embodied existence is in a constant and unrelenting state of trauma.”
If people are sincerely interested in change, then a tremendous amount of work must be done and what George Yancy is saying, the heaviest burden is on those who benefit the most from this system, i.e. white people.
He is certainly not the first writer to make such a claim, in fact James Baldwin, who is heavily quoted throughout this text was writing about race, racism, and white-black relations in the 60’s. There are also plenty contemporaries who have taken up the mantle including a number of white scholars and writers many of which are referenced here also. It is not an easy thing to be told you are a problem and harder still to hear that, and subsequently gather the intestinal fortitude to challenge oneself to move from problem to solution, to become less of a problem and indeed minimize the role and impact you have on the maintenance of white supremacy. That is the ultimate ask of George Yanky’s ‘gift.’
One must “risk tarrying with a disagreeable mirror that refused to walk quietly around the issue of whiteness.” What is the takeaway? Well he warns against one processing these words as guilt. No, “that is far too easy” he states. Instead, “Daily, white people should take account and ask: What have I done today to alleviate the anguish, to mitigate the evil, to prevent humiliation, to fight against oppression, white arrogance, white color -evasion, white privilege, white hypocrisy, white denial, and everyday white normative ways of being?”
Not only was his letter a gift, but this entire volume is a gift, if one receives it as such and does the hard work required to make this world easier for all to navigate with an absence of existential anxiety.