perspectives
		
		What's Your Black History?
		
		By Elaine Creasman 
       	  Guest Writer
		
		 
		 
		CBN.com 
		   Black history month has come and  gone. But I’m still asking a question of my family and friends:  “What’s your black history?” What I mean is, “What were you taught about African-Americans?” 
		Then I tell them  some of my black history.  
		Looking Back 
		I grew up in a  “lily-white” area southwest of Chicago. I didn’t see black people every day. As  a child, I heard talk of people leaving their neighborhoods in the city because  “colored people moved in.” 
		I  remember  warnings about driving through black neighborhoods - especially at night. I’d  ridden on the elevated trains with my parents, but some of my relatives warned  against doing so because of  “all those colored people.” 
		One memory stands  out from my youth. I was maybe 10 years old and was swimming in a public pool  in the next county on a hot summer day sometime in the 60s.  
		“Why are there hardly any people here?” I  asked my father. 
		“Because colored  people swim here,” was his shocking answer.  
		Some days, as I  see the terrible effects of racism continue in our country, I feel ashamed of  having been born white.  
		On one particular day at my large, mostly white  church several years ago  my then-teenage daughter invited three black male  friends to Sunday school. She left them for a moment and when she returned, her  friends were surrounded by security guards. One of the guards shouted, “You  don’t belong here!” Why? Because certain people saw three black youth dressed  differently then their own teenagers and concluded they were part of a gang.  When these young people walked around in the book store, as one lady told me  indignantly and “took more than one piece of sample candy,” people concluded  they were thieves. When these teens who were poor, and therefore hungry, looked  in different classrooms for cake they’d seen someone eating, it was assumed,  “they’re casing the joint.” 
		Instead of doing  what the Bible says “Love one another as I have loved you,” (John 13:34),  frantic calls were made to security to deal with criminals on the premises. 
		These young men were gracious, despite their  treatment. What broke my heart even more as they saw me crying was when one of  them said, “Don’t feel so bad, Mrs. C. We get treated this way all the time.  We’re used to it.” 
		I had to face a  fact though. If I’d fully embraced the lies I’d been taught, I might have  reacted the same way others in my church acted. I thought back to times in my  recent past when I crossed the street if I saw a black man coming and how I  avoided entering a checkout line if the clerk at the register was black.   
		The ladies from my  church, whom I knew as loving, caring Christian women, denied acting out of  prejudice. No apologies were ever offered.  
		If I’d asked those  involved in that incident, I suspect that the answer to these questions would  have been “never.”  “When was the last  time you hugged a black person, entered a black person’s home, or invited a  black family into your home?” 
		 Changing Course  
		When I asked these  questions of a friend recently, she said, “I don’t have the opportunity.” 
		I used to think the  same thing until I prayed about the issue. Then God opened doors. He opened my  heart too. 
		My daughter  brought scores of black youth home from school. Sadly, they told me other white  parents wouldn’t let them in their houses.  
		Then I was invited  to teach Sunday school to teens at a black church, and I accepted. After  befriending some ladies who were members of a black church, I was invited to  speak at a women’s retreat there. I joined integrated clubs and groups and  attended integrated church services. As a  Hospice volunteer, I started to choose black  patients to care for. Not long ago I spoke in a black church at a black friend’s  funeral about how she had impacted my life. At that moment I thought how racism  could have robbed me of that.  
		If you truly seek  racial reconciliation, you will find it. And once you integrate your life,  you’ll have to confront racism – in those around you and in your own soul. 
		One Sunday a  member of our church came to the pulpit after attending a Promise Keepers  event. He talked about being raised to use the ‘n’ word, and in his profession  as a policeman it was common practice. He went along with other officers even  though as a Christian he knew it was wrong. That evening, choked with tears, he  confessed before the congregation his racist attitudes and actions. The beauty  of the moment reached a poignant peak when a black man, a fellow Promise Keeper  who was visiting our church--walked forward and put his arm around him while he  confessed his racist sins.  
		I plan to keep  asking, “What’s your black history?” even as I continue to deal with my own—not  just in February–but every month of the year.  
		This article first appeared in the February 11, 2009 issue of The Lookout. 
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		Elaine Creasman is a freelance writer and part-time mental  health tech and lives with her husband, daughter, and granddaughter in Largo,  Florida. Her website is www.elainecreasman.com. 
		
		  
 
 
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