By Saswat Pattanayak
The history of my campus is replete
with racism. Most of the presidents of the university
were decisively racists. Segregation of students
based on whiteness/color had been a constant.
In a timeline I helped prepare for my office, we
discovered even more startling facts, some too
gory to carry online.
Well, what’s new, one would say, when ‘everyone was
doing it basically the same’ way up until 70’s. You
know, folks actually get away with that loose canon.
Of course it absolves the guilt of the guilt. The
blacks, the asians, the hispanics had no place in
white colleges back then, after all.
Back then sounds like a clichéd history. Except that
we oftentimes fail to recognize how hysterically
historical our contemporary society even is. The
majority of population surrounding my campus are
Blacks and Hispanics. Indeed, there are scores of
communities of Latino population just outside the
campus area (less than 100 meters away). Miles of
stretches of apartments are inhabited by Latinos and
Blacks. It’s like the invisible America of the
national Capital.
After all, the visible are the big cities, not their
population. The buildings, not the workers. Powerful
sites like Washington DC, New York City or Las Vegas.
Invisible are their makers: the cheap labor force.
Behind all the glory of the Capitol streets, all
glitz of the Times Square and
glamour of Nevada casinos are the footmarks of the
Blacks and Latinos. ‘They’ construct the roads
and buildings and yes keep them darn clean.
Same goes with the giant ivory tower of the
University of Maryland. The College Park campus alone
is located on 1,250 acres of rolling land. The
communities surrounding the campus are predominantly
Latino. At least 80 percent of them are! Eighty
freakin percent! The
PG County
which houses the College Park university is
predominantly black. About 63% of population in PG
County are Black (whereas only 27% are White).
Likewise, the adjoining Washington DC –the state that
houses the most powerful maniacs in political
history—
has
a population of 60% blacks and only 30% whites.
Now let’s look at the largest campus of the area, the
flagship public university and how diverse it
is—which basically means how much does the university
attempt at recruiting from the population that is
represented in the area. How reflective is it of the
reality and how contrasting are the statistics when
we compare between the people who make up the area
and the ones who get the elite tickets to higher
education. We are not even talking of the rates of
retention which is pathetically lower when it comes
to students of color. For the purpose, we are to talk
only of the recruitment (colored students who at
least showed up—no matter if they left the place
owing to the great mismatch between lived reality in
their living neighborhood and the classroom
incongruence).
Here
it is, among the undergraduates: White students:
68%! Asians: 14%. Blacks: 12%. Latino: 5.7%.
And
among the graduate students: White students: 83%!
Blacks: 7%. Rest: 10%
So what we have here is a complete contradictory
picture of what is real outside and what’s reflected
inside. This is true of all major universities of the
US. All big cities are predominantly inhabited by
people of color.
Just
look at the statistics, from the US census:
Latinos comprise 27% of New York City, 46% of Los
Angeles, 26% of Chicago, 37% of Houston, 36% of
Dallas, 30% of San Jose, 59% of San Antonio, 77% of
El Paso, 25% of San Diego, and 34% of Phoenix.
Likewise,
Blacks comprise, 28% of New York, 44% of
Philadelphia, 37% of Chicago, 26% of Houston, 27% of
Dallas, 82% of Detroit, 65% of Baltimore, 62% of
Memphis, 61% of Washington DC, and 68% of New
Orleans.
Now add these figures for all the major cities of the
America. Even if we don’t count the Asians, these
numbers alone are staggeringly so high that the
reality is, the great big cities of the world are
actually great because of the contributions of the
hard-working people of color who comprise the
majority here.
So where are the 77% of Whites of American
population?
Well, a small minority of them are in the big cities,
alright. And they clout the elite institutions
–courts, universities, business empires in major
proportions. They don’t deal with the slum problems
since they have got people to build huge buildings
for them already. They don’t have communities or
neighborhoods. Only towers shrouded by private
forests where paparazzi have to make a living of. The
majority among the rest of them also take a
break and don’t have to deal with the problems of the
colored people—leading eventually to real segregation
of the great contemporary America—one of the lesser
pondered truths of modern times.
Huge majority of whites do not reside in the working
class population that constructs the modern
monuments. The one that is the invisible America in
the Hollywood movies (again an example of
mismatch—between who appear on screen and who live in
Los Angeles), and the invisible America amidst the
homeless millions of New York and DC.
In the cities that control the rest of the country,
the ones who control the cities are a small minority
White population. And that is the grim reality even
to this date. And control they do, remotely. Living
luxuriously in posh bungalows in richest counties
which either exist side by side the largest slums
(consider the fact that the country’s 10 richest
communities are in the Washington metropolitan area
only—where even as less than one-third are White!) or
completely are way off in less dense states,
demarcating the lines of segregation.
This is called the classic contradiction of
capitalism in the political economy. The majority
work hard to make the civilizations, for the minority
to rule. The class society reinforces a social
divide, uses overpowering instruments—dominant
religions, mainstream education, standard work
ethics, negotiable law and order—to normalize the
illusions. It feels good to assume its one country,
one America blessed by a Christian God, one culture
where we have reduced the indigenous to less than 2
percent, one power fighting one war of terror outside
the country and one superpower solving the world’s
problems since we are not supposed to have any.
And it certainly makes most of us also forget –to
choose sides in the exceedingly polarized two worlds
of modern America—the Haves America, and the
Have-nots America.
Tags: Saswat, Academic, Racism, Economics, USA, Immigrant