Blanco: In Solidarity with 1.3% of UCSD

By Guest Contributor Ninoy Brown, originally published at FOBBDeep

More on UCSD’s most recent “post-racial” moment.

Within the last week, much public outrage has come upon UCSD as a result of the disgusting display of ignorance from the “Compton Cookout”.  National attention has been placed on the campus, and NAACP has recently spoken out against the incident.

With this, I wanted to post a letter that Dr. Jody Blanco, from UCSD’s Dept of Literature, had written for Kaibigang Pilipino.  Though intended for Filipinos/Filipino students and student organizations at UCSD, I felt the message was important for more folks to read, as well.

Dr. Blanco was an inspiration for many of us, student of color organizers, while attending UCSD.  In the letter, he contextualizes the “private party”, discussing why outrage is justified and why Filipino American students should stand as allies with our African American brothers and sisters.

Dear Filipina and Filipino students, colleagues, and friends:

I hope that you don’t mind my sending a mass email to you, which is something I don’t think I’ve ever done. While I know some, maybe many of you individually, I haven’t been to a KP GBM in many years, and haven’t had the opportunity to work as closely with you as I would have liked and would like to. Hopefully this is something we can begin to address and repair over time.

What has prompted this unusual message is the recent spate of events that have transpired the past week, and have caused or exacerbated the perceived lack of support for many historically underrepresented minorities – not just blacks, but Latinos, Arab- and certain Asian-Americans, Filipinos and Filipino-Americans included. I don’t need to tell you the details, which I’m sure you already know – a private party involving hundreds of UCSD students, framed as an expression of contempt for Black History Month and the free use of hate speech (which, as it turns out, was downloaded from a website); a follow-up televised program on the Koala newspaper website, expressing support for hate speech.

By now, if you’ve been listening to the local and national news, you may also have a sense of the fallout: black students at UCSD threatening to withdraw or transfer out of UCSD en masse; the administration’s simultaneous condemnation of these events and declaration of non-commitment to any further significant actions to be taken in response to the outbreak of hate speech on campus; the intervention of the San Diego city council and California state assembly members committed to take responsibility and hold people accountable (because the university won’t); a public statement made by the NAACP promising to conduct its own investigation into the matter; national coverage of our campus and university on network TV, featuring reporters and analysts who express open disbelief at the campus’s presumed commitment to its principles of community, and bewilderment at the administration’s failure to take any meaningful or effective action defending and protecting its students from injury and insult.

For those of you who have close friends in the black community, you may have witnessed or heard stories of their trauma and insecurity: students weeping in the halls and on Library Walk at their helplessness and inability to represent themselves against the violence of having other people represent them. If you are like me, you are familiar with this feeling: you have grown up seeing your parents scolded by an angry grocery clerk or policeman for appearing ignorant or slow; you have been denigrated or mocked by whites for excelling at the things you love or feel passionate about; you have felt betrayed by an authority who witnessed your persecution at one point or another, and pretended not to notice. You are familiar with the mistrust, lack of confidence, and sometimes, the outright fear, of the world outside your immediate family and friends; you have struggled consciously or unconsciously to accept or refuse the possibility that the world outside this insulated circle neither values nor encourages your participation and contribution to a wider community. If you can’t relate to what I’m saying, perhaps it’s all for the best, because I wouldn’t wish that consciousness and psychological conflict on anybody. But if you can relate to what your African-American brothers and sisters are feeling, you probably also understand that this is what most ethnic and / or historically underrepresented minorities, in the US and in every country, experience to one degree or another. It is the experience we share in common, an experience that oftentimes draws us close to one another in times of danger.

I want to underline this last point in order to foreground my basic message: I’m asking you to become or stay involved, and to make sure there are always Pinoy and Pinay voices, in the responses and activities to this event that will occur in the following weeks or months. I’m asking you to become or stay involved, first and foremost, because as historically underrepresented minorities we are directly implicated in both acts of racial hate speech and the university’s responses to it. As many of you who have taken my classes before may know, when the US conducted a near-genocidal war against the Philippines at the beginning of the twentieth century (which left between 500,000-1,000,000 dead, mostly civilians), both US soldiers and commanders often referred to Filipinos as “niggers.” In the 1920s and 30s, when Filipino Carlos Bulosan and his compatriots came to the US to escape the US-driven poverty in the Philippines, they were identified as “niggers,” and they were lynched, beaten, and murdered without any recourse to the law. To this day, the word retains the same popular meaning as it did at the turn of the century: to be a “nigger” means to be identified as an available target for extra-judicial violence and social exile, without right of appeal to an established or legitimate authority. This is what the word means, regardless of who uses it in what context. That is what makes it a dangerous word and concept. It is a word that attacks what it identifies, and paves the way for further violence.

My second reason for asking for your committed involvement is that your African-American friends, collaborators, and co-sponsors need you. They need you to defend and protect them, to promote and cultivate a climate and community that respects, safeguards, and enhances our humanity: our right to belong, to participate and contribute to the realization of common dreams. You may think that, because you don’t have as many co-sponsored activities with BSU, MEChA, or APSA, you don’t have much in common with them. You are wrong. We are all fighting to increase student recruitment and retention of historically underrepresented minorities at UCSD, whereas the groups that comprise the majorities at UCSD don’t need to do this. We are all faced with constant underfunding and are obliged to conduct recruitment and retention activities that are regularly performed by hired full-time staff in most other universities. We are all passionately invested in reproducing and reinventing the originality of our cultural heritage, its joys and sorrows, which help us understand how and why we remain separate from a greater cultural heritage that might be simply defined as “American.” They need you to give them respect, and ask for their respect in return. They need you to validate their humanity and their belonging; and to ask that they validate ours. They are our kababayan, whether they know it or not. In the past, African-Americans have historically fought for our rights to self-determination, both in the Philippines and in the United States. Whether we, or our parents, know it or not, we owe a great debt to them: both directly and indirectly, through the ways we have benefited from their pioneering struggles and sufferings. It is time to begin repaying that debt.

The third reason I ask for your concern and involvement is that it is time for our presence to be felt as a strong and united constituency within the UCSD academic community. Many of our parents raised us under the idea that if we wanted to pursue the American way of life, we have to shut up, avoid any negative attention, do our work quietly, respect all established authority, and pray that our efforts would be recognized and rewarded on earth as they would be in heaven. Our employers and managers tell us that our proper attitude towards authority should be a submissive form of gratitude. But to be a constituency means to actively participate in the constitution of governance, and one of the tasks of governance is the administration of justice. Have we been assigned the task and given the authority to act as judges over this case? No. Can our voices frame the way justice is administered, or imagined? As a constituency, yes.

A fourth and final reason for our support and involvement is that it gives us the opportunity to have the courage to use our own reason in the understanding and exploration of our racialized past and present. University administrators by and large have chosen to exonerate themselves from responsibility for the actions of the students and groups involved in these expressions of hate speech. Their reason for doing so, among others, is that they are afraid of legal repercussions if any reprisals implicate the university for infringing on the right to free speech, particularly when students are “technically” off campus.

In my opinion, this question does not rank as one of the more important questions to be asking about the implications of hate speech associated with our university. As Marx once said, the answer always depends on the form of the question that’s being asked. Do the events of the past week all boil down to the question of whether or not students have the right to exercise free speech? No. The scandal isn’t that the right to free speech might even include the right for individuals to denigrate and stereotype people: I can turn the TV to Fox News Channel and see the proof of that for myself any given day. The scandal is that an event like this could only happen in or around a university or institution that has failed in its commitment to academic and cultural diversity. The scandal is that many students at UCSD consider black people and communities as a product of their imaginations and consumer habits: an entertainment commodity we pay to watch on MTV, or hear on the radio. A stereotype we have the “right” to enjoy and take pleasure in, because we have paid good money to possess and consume it in the privacy of our homes and TV screens. The scandal is that many whites – and even Asian Americans – do not belong to a community that involved and involves the active participation and vital humanity of another person or community of color, another historically underrepresented minority. It’s not hard to see why: only 1 of every 50 students on this campus is African American, and only 1 of 10 students is Latina / Latino.

As those of you involved in the recruitment and retention of Pinay / Pinoy students on campus must know, when you deny a person, or group the right and opportunity to be part of a community, you deprive that person or group of the opportunity to represent and express their humanity. The dehumanization involved in the promotion of stereotypes is just a surface expression of a deeper, systemic dehumanization that has taken place, and that continues to take place in our university. The tragedy is the system that allowed, and even promoted, the permanent exile of a group of human beings from any meaningful participation in any form of community in America.

What can we do to change this? That’s my question. What’s yours?

Sumasainyo,

Jody Blanco, Department of Literature

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Trackbacks & Pings

  1. HW: Tuesday, 2/23/2010 « AP Language at Morse High School on 23 Feb 2010 at 5:43 pm

    [...] the Rhetorical Box Think Sheet provided in class today to critically read and analyze this response letter from Dr. Jody Blanco, a UCSD Professor, written in light of the recent racially charged events that [...]

  2. The Long Road To Reconciliation « headsparks* on 25 Feb 2010 at 5:33 pm

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  3. Noose Found at UCSD: Real Pain. Real Action – In Solidarity with UCSD Protesters « Yeah, That Needs to Go on 27 Feb 2010 at 2:30 am

    [...] urge you to read the letter that Dr. Jody Blanco, from UCSD’s Dept of Literature, had written for Kaibigang Pilipino. Though [...]

  4. Blanco: In Solidarity with 1.3% of UCSD | Racialicious « yaman salahi on 01 Mar 2010 at 6:18 pm

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Comments

  1. Deaf Indian Muslim Anarchist wrote:

    I hope that many Black students at UCSD will NOT withdraw or drop out. Please don’t let the racists win. do NOT leave the university! Please stay and fight the hate. Show those racist bigots how WRONG they are.

  2. jen* wrote:

    I have tears from reading this. Thanks for letting us see there is at least one faculty member willing to speak against this idiocy.

  3. Mike wrote:

    Wow. Thank you for posting this. It expresses so much so powerfully.

    I hope UCSD students, and Asian Americans in general, are able to take messages like this to heart. There’s so much truth here and I hope work will emerge from this scandal that strengthens the bonds between ethnic communities.

  4. JunePearl wrote:

    Wow….just….wow. This is so meaningful. As a Black woman (of West Indian heritage) who was a student at University of Illinois @ Urbana-Champaign, there were many, many, many instances like the one that took place at UCSD. With the largest greek life in the US, UIUC was a safe haven for racist depictions to continue. I’ve seen it all, from our very own *blatantly* racist mascot (now just a symbol…instead of a mascot…yeah…progress is made in inches) to the “Tequila and Tacos” denigrating Latinas/Latinos party one sorority held, to imitations of a Black fraternity that another fraternity held. To be honest, the administration at UCSD did more against this current situation than UIUC ever did in my day.

    But to see a non-Black person of color reach out to his people and ask for allegiance to our pain…that is beautiful. My heart aches with the other Black students at UCSD. I hope they know that although it is a horrendous legacy, they are not alone. So many of us had people of privilege try to strip us of our humanity in the very same ways. I hope they continue with their education (whether or not it is on a UCSD campus is a decision every person has to make for themselves). I hope some of them even decide to become administrators. Because when this happens again (and it will. As long as the response is a diluted form of justice, it will happen again) I hope one of them is a university administrator somewhere. And they will use their power to say NOT ON MY CAMPUS!

    Above all I hope the call for justice continues. That this not be something that fizzles out. I am so appreciative of Dr. Blanco, this letter seems truly genuine. The sincerity of his words make me believe in the possibility of coalitions again. In all the voices of oppression unifying and calling for more, calling for the validation of our unique human experiences and the betterment of our universal quality of life.

  5. Diana wrote:

    This is a beautiful statement and affirmation of why people of color need to support one another and our humanity.

  6. JunePearl wrote:

    I jsut realized that my last line can be misread. I guess I should say “all voices who have *faced* oppression…”

  7. Brenda wrote:

    This was a very heartfelt written letter. I hope that it brings about change and unity on this campus. My feelings about African American students leaving are mixed. In a way, I support it because although they are there to get an education, their lives and safety are more important. Yet at the same time, I commend those who choose to continue their education on the campus.

    Most of times people say and do racist things because they want to instill fear as they are afraid of “losing control” (if they even have any) or of someone else being “on top”, being THEIR boss or better than them, especially if it’s a POC. Also, they need some way to fill in their empty minds and unproductive time.

    Really, how much sense does it make to hate someone simply because of the color of their skin? Simple answer: It doesn’t make sense.

  8. moth wrote:

    This is so incredibly beautiful. Thank you SO much for posting it.

  9. Soda and Candy wrote:

    Tears in my eyes. This is such a powerful message, and indeed many parts of it could apply to a lot of different situations involving racism. More white people should read it too.

    I do hope that somehow the students involved face some consequences, at the very least they ought to be named and shamed. That way they could begin to understand that their behavior requires their shame.

  10. shemari wrote:

    This was very powerful. I hope that this does inspire solidarity among the minority students at USCD.

  11. Just A Thought wrote:

    I’m with DIMA – the black students should not withdraw, transfer, or drop out.

    Also, I am so glad that this professor is reaching out to his community to build cross cultural/ethnic/racial solidarity among POC. It is a thoughtful reminder that all underrepresented groups have so much more to gain when we work together.

  12. jmn wrote:

    This is a powerful read. Thanks, Dr. Blanco, for your work in helping ethnic communities struggle and fight together to gain not only representation, but human dignity, in the face of such a dehumanizing event.

  13. Cakes wrote:

    Little wonder Dr. Blanco is a role model for so many. I hope these words are inspiration for POCs on campus at UCSD, and beyond. Thank you for sharing them.

  14. Sharese wrote:

    wow. This is a beautiful letter, I like jen*, have tears in my eyes from reading this. The power within the voice rings true.

    I agree also with DeafIndianMuslimAnarchist that the students should not leave the university but there MUST BE a cry EN MASSE to have the administration do something. I remember being a student at a University and the administration did NOTHING to quelch the sexism and racism that happened on our campus. This has gone on long enough. Too many of our University structures turn a blind eye to this hate.

    I hope that UCSD gets it together enough to expell the people who put this “party” on and they send a message that this kind of thing is NOT ok within learning institutions.

    I stand by my brothers and sisters of all colors during this time.

    In Peace.

  15. blackstocking wrote:

    Thank you for posting Dr. Blanco’s letter.
    Corny, but still true, and worth remembering “The people, united, will never be defeated.”

  16. Aiyo wrote:

    That was just so sweet and nice Can someone find Dr Blanco and give him a big hug from me please

  17. Digital Coyote wrote:

    I wish there were more people like the good doctor here at more universities.

    I don’t know if I agree with thinking the students should stay.

    If the school sanctioned the group responsible, administrators are going to have to deal with the fallout of it being a poor reflection on the campus. They’re also going to have to deal with the impact it makes on the student body; being more worried about being sued over free speech makes me suspicious.

    While the loss of some or all 1.3% might not make a dent in UCSD’s bottom line, the attention it would draw might shame it in to growing a backbone. If the school has a habit of letting these sorts of things blow over, it deserves a reputation for being an inhospitable cesspool.

  18. RCHOUDH wrote:

    Wonderful letter and hopefully it succeeds in building the coalitions necessary for fighting such injustices.

  19. in a land w/o sea wrote:

    maraming salamat, kuya (many thanks, brother) for posting doctora blanco’s letter.

    also corny but true: makibaka. huwag matakot.
    (struggle on. don’t be afraid/be fearless.)

  20. moth wrote:

    A note on free speech – the First Amendment says the state can’t sanction you for saying what you want. It doesn’t mean that your school, boss, or whatever can’t. You don’t get to call your teacher stupid and sue that your rights were violated when you get detention. You don’t to curse your boss out and sue that your rights were violated when you get fired. The people who threw this party don’t have a legal case for suing for free speech – and the college knows it.

  21. Kendra wrote:

    I tried not to cry while reading this. I’m most certainly in solidarity with these students as a fellow UC attendee as well as a black female student. I know what it’s like to just cry in the hallway or lock yourself in the bathroom cause you can’t control a certain feeling inside you. I wish I could physically be there for those students. For now I believe UC’s are forwarding e-mails for solidarity. If the schools don’t want to defend their students then they should face the consequences.

  22. alexf wrote:

    Dr. Blanco you make me proud. As a Filipino-Canadian I am often saddened when my brothers and sisters remove themselves from the struggle of PoCs (including our own many struggles). We must stand in solidarity with all oppressed people or we will always remain under the boot of those in power.

    Sulong mga kapatid! Kung hindi ngayon, kailan?

  23. Cheyenne wrote:

    I’m reminded that there is something very special about the POC solidarity at UCSD. We have some of the most caring, critical, and politically savvy people ever, because the campus is so hateful and fucked up that we are good at fostering a culture of resistance and community. But while having an education is important, it doesn’t have to be at UCSD. I don’t see a reason why these 1st year students, or other students (who are not graduating in June like me), should have to stay when they could transfer out. Yeah the rest of the world is racist, but UCSD is more racist, and that pain might not be worth it.

  24. Tatiana wrote:

    A beautiful and wonderfully written letter. And, so incredibly necessary. All too often PoC are playing the oppression olympics, vying for the right to be the “most oppressed”. This is yet another instance showing why we need to join together and support one another. The oppression of one PoC community is an open door for the oppression of us all.

    What most shocks me about UCSD’s response (or lack thereof) is the legal implication of their inaction. Clearly, they are doing a masterful job of knowingly fostering a hostile environment at the expense of marginalized persons. If I were a student at UCSD, I would be: 1) working toward the unification of all PoC student groups, 2) speaking with an attorney, 3) filing a complaint with the California State Human Rights department, and 4) issuing a unified statement (supported by the multiple national organizations that are supporting them..i.e: NAACP). I say this because, individually, I went through my own “hostile environment” experience at a university…and when they refused to take any action, I sued them. I won and they are still on probation from the state and forking out big bucks to change university-wide policies that create a safer environment for marginalized students.

    Large powers-that-be often think they can bully us (PoC) around and that we won’t fight back. Now, I’m not a lawsuit-happy kinda gal, but sometimes it’s the only thing that wakes them up. Regardless of the outcome, I hope this proves to be a unifying moment for the PoC students on campus.

    En la lucha.

  25. Oyan wrote:

    I am a Poc, and worked at UCSD and knew/felt this for some time. Last quarter was one of THE MOST PAINFUL experiences of my life! To see this ‘outed’ is interersting as UC colleges has/had the legacy of the ‘liberal’ 1960’s, but that era is long gone. With regards this incident, it is rumored that a Poc sponsored this craziness;I am not completely sure of what his actual involvement was in this, but this ‘person of interest’ is all over Youtube. Finally, much of the discomfort I experienced was from students, who were non-anglo, but who parroted racist behavior to a fault. It was heartbreaking.

  26. cocolamala wrote:

    do these types of parties violate the student code of conduct?

  27. Katrina wrote:

    I am at work at a desk in an open area. I had to just blink back the tears, so I just would not cry fully, outwardly. I cannot stand to hear things like this, but it is nothing new. Solidarity is necessary in times like these. Whether, it is this incident, or a local situation that became global. Like the South Philadelphia incident of the Asian students being pulled from classes receiving beatings by fellow people of color. All local incidents are global now…just stand up for injustice. There is no place for injustice to hide with the technology we have now. The series of atrocities that have plagued people of color worldwide can now be heard and seen…continue to add your voice. Thank you for this article and my thanks to Dr. Blanco.

  28. Katrina wrote:

    I also did not know the in-depth history of the Philippines, was conscious of the racism, but the “near-genocide” (…which left between 500,000-1,000,000 dead, mostly civilians)….both US soldiers and commanders often referred to Filipinos as “niggers.”…just damn

  29. alexf wrote:

    Katrina: if you’re looking for a quick history of the Fil-Am War, I wrote a summary on my blog (with pics from the period):
    http://alexfelipe.com/2008/08/30/the-philippine-american-war-america’s-debut-as-an-imperial-power/

    Unfortunately most Filipinos have forgotten this period. The American educational system (much like the residential schools of Canada where the placed indigenous kids) did its work.

    Thus we have mostly forgotten that:
    - it was we that were first called the “White Man’s Burden”
    - our people were put into concentration camps
    - subjected to a much more horrific precursor to water-boarding, the water cure
    - our people were displayed in human zoos across the US (including Coney Island, and the St. Louis World’s Fair of 1902)
    - a US general ordered everyone over 10 killed on the island of Samar
    - by some estimates 1 in 6 were killed on Luzon
    … and on, and on, and on…

  30. G.K. wrote:

    It’s wonderful to hear from a non-black professor a reminder that even though POCs are all from totally different cultures, we all share a similar history of being damaged and tortured by racism to this very day. I enjoyed reading the letter—it was very touching, and necessary.

    I told a co-worker back in the mid-’90’s that it seemed like black folks and other POCs back in the 1960’s could relate more to each other’s struggles and fights for civil rights/just the right to be treated like human beings period, and it seemed like that feeling that we were all one in the same struggle despite our very real differences had just disappeared after the 1970’s. It seems to be coming back slowly but surely, in a way, despite the riding tide of rabid right-wingers exploiting every fear and ounce of hate they can spot. The professor’s letter is an excellent example of a request for solidarity in the fight against racism.

  31. myagyagan wrote:

    Thanks so much for this, Dr. Blanco. As a Pil-Am student at Cal, I foresee this open letter as extending past UCSD, but into the UC system as a whole, as well as institutions of higher education at large.

    As Dr. Blanco has beautifully expressed, the Compton Cookouts aren’t just problems defined within the world of UCSD, but are a systemic error that has transcended into the realm of education policy.

    Students, faculty, staff, and persons of color need each other more than ever in public universities. With budget cuts, fee hikes, and now non-existent student resources, we must foster cross-cultural development in an effort to demand the equity that has been continually denied to us.

  32. Mike wrote:

    UCSD is a campus where only 27% of the student body is white. If POC are disenfranchised, it is not for lack of numbers, but, for lack of cooperation.

  33. SarahLibrarian wrote:

    @Mike: The number of POC students at UCSD is irrelevant to disenfranchisement. One only needs to look at apartheid in South Africa to know that this is true.

    Although your percentage data is correct (for undergraduate students only, from 2008), it can be viewed from: http://studentresearch.ucsd.edu/sriweb/Profile2008.pdf

    this profile also indicates that 64% of the undergraduate student body are “students of color”–not sure how the USCD collects and interprets this data as it seems to be conflicting.

    Unless you are able to give specific examples or instances (with sources to back them up) of students of color NOT cooperating your argument is purely rhetorical.

  34. Mike wrote:

    @SarahLibrarian
    Isn’t the point of the letter by Dr Blanco is that POC could work harder at cooperating?

    You say “Unless you are able to give specific examples or instances (with sources to back them up) of students of color NOT cooperating your argument is purely rhetorical.” For my source I’ll quote Dr Blanco.

    Dr Blanco says that “You may think that, because you don’t have as many co-sponsored activities with BSU, MEChA, or APSA, you don’t have much in common with them.” The implication is that a lack of unity exists. The implication also is that Dr Blanco believes that that the Filipino(a) students may not feel involved in this issue.

  35. jen* wrote:

    regardless of the percentage of POC at the school, black students have been stated to make up 1.3% of the student body.

    with that information and the further note that now there has been a noose placed in the school library, with the threat of more to come, I would think that the implications are particularly dire for the black student body. at this point, this whole sitch makes me sick.

    I liked the consequences discussed by eh on the Compton Cookout thread (#42), where she talked about corporations not coming to recruit from the school. That sounds like a great way to send a message, although it might not work in this specific situation, there should be similar far-reaching consequences, IMO.