News

What does it mean to craft a ‘lifestyle of repair’?

Ross Yednock swam in a sea of American middle-class well-being all his life. He grew up in 1980s Midwestern suburbs, enjoyed high school football stardom, graduated from Michigan State University without debt, and had a successful career.

But as the modern American racial reckoning heated up, he began to wonder how different that trajectory might have been if he had not been white.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

For white allies in the reparative justice movement, participation often reflects an evolving view of their civic responsibility.

An intense period of self-reflection and study of history he’d never learned in school followed.

Eventually, having no spouse or descendants, he rewrote his will to give all his assets – cash, home, investments, life insurance – to the Justice League of Greater Lansing Michigan, a faith-based reparations group. Its endowment fund, managed by an all-Black advisory council, will direct money to education scholarships, homeownership programs, and business startups.

This is what is called “practicing a lifestyle of repair,” says Robin Rue Simmons, the former Evanston, Illinois, alderwoman who led the push for the nation’s first municipal reparations program there.

The topic is explosive, however. Eighty percent of white Americans polled by the Pew Research Center in 2021 opposed repayment to descendants of enslaved people.

Yet there is a growing body of reparations plans that could only be happening with white support – and the stories of shifting thought behind it.  

Ross Yednock swam in a sea of American middle-class well-being all his life. He grew up in 1980s Midwestern suburbs, enjoyed high school football stardom, and graduated from Michigan State University without debt. He’s had a career in Michigan Democratic politics and state government while exercising his business chops on the side in profitable real estate investments. 

But as the modern American racial reckoning heated up, the temperature of that sea of privilege grew uncomfortable for Mr. Yednock. He fell into intense self-interrogation about that life, and how much of it he owes to being white.

Speaking about it with furrowed brow, carefully editing his words, he tries to capture the essence of the civic responsibility he feels to repair what he calls a history of “brutality” to Black people that continues to this day.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

For white allies in the reparative justice movement, participation often reflects an evolving view of their civic responsibility.

With the recent crescendo of the reparative justice movement into the mainstream, Mr. Yednock’s is an examination playing out in pockets of white America. It’s seen in California’s consideration of financial payments to the descendants of Black residents discriminated against in the 19th century; in the housing reparations program passed by Evanston, Illinois; in corporate and higher education efforts; and in countless faith-based programs shifting church assets to the Black community. 

“It’s been a slow build, and it’s really kind of rapidly increased in the last five to 10 years,” Mr. Yednock says of his own stir over historical racial injustices from slavery to lynchings, mass incarceration, police brutality, and segregation. 

Previous ArticleNext Article