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‘Work that leads to joy’: White men who recognize privilege, fight racism

The focus of Black History Month is and always should be the achievements of Black Americans. But I’d like to give a shoutout to some white men this year. This is a necessary exception because the continued segregation of white and Black Americans’ shared history on Native American land is robbing all Americans of a comprehensive telling of our past and threatening our hopes for a more united tomorrow.

In 2020, Kevin Eppler and Jay Coen Gilbert gathered more than 100 white men from across the country for a video conference about how they could learn to have a role in dismantling racism and the culture and systems of white supremacy that reside within themselves, their communities, and their country. 

Why We Wrote This

A Black History Month article about white men? Yes. This group works to recognize and correct the stories – and systems – that perpetuate racism, including those that have benefited them.

That kicked off White Men for Racial Justice, which provides a space to unlearn misconceptions and prejudices, and participate in informed action. Men have attended school board meetings, for example, to speak up for teaching a more complete version of U.S. history.  

Closing in on its third year, White Men for Racial Justice has garnered more than 400 men into its ongoing community of practice. “The work of racial justice is lifelong work,” says Mr. Eppler. “And it’s work that leads to joy.”

The focus of Black History Month is and always should be the achievements of Black Americans. But if you’d consider being radically inclusive for a moment, I’d like to give a shoutout to some white men this year. This is a necessary exception because the continued segregation of white and Black Americans’ shared history on Native American land is robbing all Americans of a comprehensive telling of our past, creating lots of misinformation in our present, and threatening our hopes for a more united tomorrow.

This lack of historical integration limits our knowledge of each other and creates fears and divisions that truth and proximity can help us heal. 

One week after the 2020 murder of George Floyd, a Black man, at the hands of a white Minneapolis police officer, two white men from Pennsylvania wanted to see things change. They decided that change would start with them. Kevin Eppler and Jay Coen Gilbert gathered more than 100 white men from across the country for a video conference about how they could learn to have a role in dismantling racism and the culture and systems of white supremacy that reside within themselves, their communities, and their country. 

Why We Wrote This

A Black History Month article about white men? Yes. This group works to recognize and correct the stories – and systems – that perpetuate racism, including those that have benefited them.

That kicked off White Men for Racial Justice (WMRJ), a brave space for white men to unlearn misconceptions and prejudices and to learn ways to show up in multicultural spaces with skills that could help them engage within and across racial lines using curiosity, not judgment.

An earlier example

In 1946, physicist and Nobel laureate Albert Einstein, who was also a member of the NAACP, spoke at Lincoln University, a historically Black college. As Isabel Wilkerson records in her book “Caste: The Origins of our Discontents,” he said, “The separation of the races is not a disease of the colored people, but a disease of the white people.” WMRJ is addressing this long-standing need that has plagued our society.  

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