White Supremacy Culture
by Tema Okun, changeworkDR
I dedicate this piece to my long-time colleague
Kenneth Jones, who helped me become wise about many things and kept me honest
about everything else. I love you and miss you beyond words.
This piece on white supremacy culture builds on
the work of many people, including (but not limited to) Andrea Ayvazian, Bree
Carlson, Beverly Daniel Tatum, M.E. Dueker, Nancy Emond, Kenneth Jones, Jonn
Lunsford, Sharon Martinas, Joan Olsson, David Rogers, James Williams, Sally
Yee, as well as the work of Grassroots Leadership, Equity Institute Inc, the
People's Institute for Survival and Beyond, the Challenging White Supremacy
workshop, the Lillie Allen Institute, the Western States Center, and the
contributions of hundreds of participants in the DR process.
* These sections are based on the work of
Daniel Buford with the People's Institute for Survival and Beyond, who has done
extensive research on white supremacy culture.
This is a list of characteristics of white
supremacy culture that show up in our organizations. Culture is powerful
precisely because it is so present and at the same time so very difficult to
name or identify. The characteristics listed below are damaging because they
are used as norms and standards without being pro-actively named or chosen by
the group. They are damaging because they promote white supremacy thinking.
Because we all live in a white supremacy culture, these characteristics show up
in the attitudes and behaviors of all of us -- people of color and white
people. Therefore, these attitudes and behaviors can show up in any group or
organization, whether it is white-led or predominantly white or people of
color-led or predominantly people of color.
perfectionism*
- little appreciation expressed
among people for the work that others are doing; appreciation that is
expressed usually directed to those who get most of the credit anyway
- more common is to point out
either how the person or work is inadequate
- or even more common, to talk
to others about the inadequacies of a person or their work without ever
talking directly to them
- mistakes are seen as
personal, i.e. they reflect badly on the person making them as opposed to
being seen for what they are -- mistakes
- making a mistake is confused
with being a mistake, doing wrong with being wrong
- little time, energy, or money
put into reflection or identifying lessons learned that can improve
practice, in other words little or no learning from mistakes
- tendency to identify what's
wrong; little ability to identify, name, and appreciate what's right
- often internally felt, in
other words the perfectionist fails to appreciate her own good work, more
often pointing out his faults or 'failures,' focusing on inadequacies and
mistakes rather than learning from them; the person works with a harsh and
constant inner critic
antidotes: develop a culture
of appreciation, where the organization takes time to make sure that people's
work and efforts are appreciated; develop a learning organization, where it is
expected that everyone will make mistakes and those mistakes offer
opportunities for learning; create an environment where people can recognize
that mistakes sometimes lead to positive results; separate the person from the
mistake; when offering feedback, always speak to the things that went well
before offering criticism; ask people to offer specific suggestions for how to
do things differently when offering criticism; realize that being your own
worst critic does not actually improve the work, often contributes to low
morale among the group, and does not help you or the group to realize the
benefit of learning from mistakes
sense of urgency
- continued sense of urgency
that makes it difficult to take time to be inclusive, encourage
demppressive culture
antidotes: understand that
structure cannot in and of itself facilitate or prevent abuse; understand the
link between defensiveness and fear (of losing power, losing face, losing
comfort, losing privilege); work on your own defensiveness; name defensiveness
as a problem when it is one; give people credit for being able to handle more
than you think; discuss the ways in which defensiveness or resistance to new
ideas gets in the way of the mission
quantity over quality*
- all resources of organization
are directed toward producing measurable goals
- things that can be measured
are more highly valued than things that cannot, for example numbers of
people attending a meeting, newsletter circulation, money spent are valued
more than quality of relationships, democratic decision-making, ability to
constructively deal with conflict
- little or no value attached
to process; if it can't be measured, it has no value
- discomfort with emotion and
feelings
- no understanding that when
there is a conflict between content (the agenda of the meeting) and
process (people's need to be heard or engaged), process will prevail (for
example, you may get through the agenda, but if you haven't paid attention
to people's need to be heard, the decisions made at the meeting are
undermined and/or disregarded)
antidotes: include process or
quality goals in your planning; make sure your organization has a values
statement which expresses the ways in which you want to do your work; make sure
this is a living document and that people are using it in their day to day
work; look for ways to measure process goals (for example if you have a goal of
inclusivity, think about ways you can measure whether or not you have achieved
that goal); learn to recognize those times when you need to get off the agenda
in order to address people's underlying concerns
worship of the written word
- if it's not in a memo, it
doesn't exist
- the organization does not
take into account or value other ways in which information gets shared
- those with strong
documentation and writing skills are more highly valued, even in
organizations where ability to relate to others is key to the mission
antidotes: take the time to
analyze how people inside and outside the organization get and share
information; figure out which things need to be written down and come up with
alternative ways to document what is happening; work to recognize the
contributions and skills that every person brings to the organization (for
example, the ability to build relationships with those who are important to the
organization's mission); make sure anything written can be clearly understood
(avoid academic language, 'buzz' words, etc.)
only one right way
- the belief there is one right
way to do things and once people are introduced to the right way, they
will see the light and adopt it
- when they do not adapt or
change, then something is wrong with them (the other, those not changing),
not with us (those who 'know' the right way)
- similar to the missionary who
does not see value in the culture of other communities, sees only value in
their beliefs about what is good.
antidotes: accept that there
are many ways to get to the same goal; once the group has made a decision about
which way will be taken, honor that decision and see what you and the
organization will learn from taking that way, even and especially if it is not
the way you would have chosen; work on developing the ability to notice when
people do things differently and how those different ways might improve your
approach; look for the tendency for a group or a person to keep pushing the
same point over and over out of a belief that there is only one right way and
then name it; when working with communities from a different culture than yours
or your organization's, be clear that you have some learning to do about the communities'
ways of doing; never assume that you or your organization know what's best for
the community in isolation from meaningful relationships with that community
paternalism
- decision-making is clear to
those with power and unclear to those without it
- those with power think they
are capable of making decisions for and in the interests of those without
power
- those with power often don't
think it is important or necessary to understand the viewpoint or
experience of those for whom they are making decisions
- those without power
understand they do not have it and understand who does
- those without power do not
really know how decisions get made and who makes what decisions, and yet
they are completely familiar with the impact of those decisions on them
antidotes: make sure that
everyone knows and understands who makes what decisions in the organization;
make sure everyone knows and understands their level of responsibility and
authority in the organization; include people who are affected by decisions in
the decision-making
either/or thinking*
- things are eitherpeople who
show emotion
- requiring people to think in
a linear (logical) fashion and ignoring or invalidating those who think in
other ways
- impatience with any thinking
that does not appear 'logical'
antidotes: realize that
everybody has a world view and that everybody's world view affects the way they
understand things; realize this means you too; push yourself to sit with
discomfort when people are expressing themselves in ways which are not familiar
to you; assume that everybody has a valid point and your job is to understand
what that point is
right to comfort
- the belief that those with
power have a right to emotional and psychological comfort (another aspect
of valuing 'logic' over emotion)
- scapegoating those who cause
discomfort
- equating individual acts of
unfairness against white people with systemic racism which daily targets
people of color
antidotes: understand that
discomfort is at the root of all growth and learning; welcome it as much as you
can; deepen your political analysis of racism and oppression so you have a
strong understanding of how your personal experience and feelings fit into a
larger picture; don't take everything personally
One of the purposes of listing characteristics
of white supremacy culture is to point out how organizations which
unconsciously use these characteristics as their norms and standards make it
difficult, if not impossible, to open the door to other cultural norms and
standards. As a result, many of our organizations, while saying we want to be
multi-cultural, really only allow other people and cultures to come in if they
adapt or conform to already existing cultural norms. Being able to identify and
name the cultural norms and standards you want is a first step to making room
for a truly multi-cultural organization.
Partial Bibliography:
Notes from People's Institute for Survival and Beyond Workshop, Oakland, CA,
spring 1999. Notes from Challenging White Supremacy Workshop, San Francisco,
CA, spring 1999. Beverly Daniel Tatum, Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting
Together in the Cafeteria? NY: HarperCollins, 1997. Derrick Jensen, A Language
Older Than Words. NY: Context Books, 2000. Paul Kivel, Uprooting Racism. PA:
New Society Publishers, 1996. Anne Wilson Schaef, Living in Process. NY:
Ballantine, 1998. For complete bibliography, see complete notebook for
changework's Dismantling Racism process.
changeworkDR is a group of trainers, educators and organizers working to
build strong progressive anti-racist organizations and institutions.
changeworkDR can be reached at temaokun@earthlink.net
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