The public health crisis of racism will not be solved by ignoring it
To be published in the May 2023 edition of the Buckeye Review
As part of the Black Mental Health Symposium weSymposium we must look at
relationships and marriage. What if Can a person is inbe in a mixed marriage and
ignore race?
We know of one such couple where the husband is Black, and the wife is white, and the
topic of race is never discussed. Ignoring problems or personal and emotional issues is
not the best way to have an intimate relationship.
In a loving relationship, the participants cannot ignore the elephant in the room. It
cannot be put on the back burner and allowed to simmer for years. Either the pan will
burn, or the house will burn down. We have seen it time and time again with one of the
members carry the emotional burden for the couple and the family – but it leaves a
hollowness and passes along a family dysfunction that become replicated by the
children.
It is not always the discussion of race, it can be anything – however, we are focusing on
race because very little has been said about dealing with racism – since it was declared
a public health crisis by the City of Youngstown in 2020, and by the state of Ohio Board
of Education in 2021. In his book, “The conspiracy of silence” Dr. Derald Wing Sue
proves that the white leadership and white majority – are not only uncomfortable
discussing race, but they also actually punish those who openly discuss it. This could
easily explain why Ohio at the state level went to great lengths to rescind the resolution
passed in 2021 and subsequently punished those board members who would not go
along with the plan. It could also explain why Black people typically keep quiet about
the trauma inflicted on them because of the daily insults and not-so-micro – aggressions
that occur.
Even now- as the state is quietly taking over education to continue with the
“whitewashing” of history – there is an ongoing and growing need to affirm for ourselves
– the value of our identity and the dignity of our humanity. This cannot be done with a
single event or conversation, as we are literally rowing upstream against the current that
wishes to revision history through a white only lens.
While we are talking about racism and its impact on Black people, there is a price to be
paid for the white majority – or the white individuals who choose to absorb the privilege
and ignore the price for it by others. They must override their common sense and sear
their consciences repeatedly to parrot the talking points of color-blindness and “we’re all
treated equally, under the law” regardless of race or simply joining in the conspiracy of
silence. Conspiracies are not good – no matter how long they continue.
Within the marriage and at the homes of couples, both Black and white, there must be a
level of honesty that upholds our trust and commitment to one another. This is the glue,
the foundation of a relationship. So too, within our households of faith, where John
8:32 is often quoted that “you shall know the truth and the truth shall set us free” we
must all come to the place of awareness of how deeply racism has damaged our nation
and our conscience. Once our awareness is piqued, we can do the work of buildingof
building and nurturing relationships both individually and, on a community-wide basis.
In our practice we often say marriage counseling is hard – or functional, nurturing
relationships are hard, becausehard because the work – is hard. But we also and
affirm constantly, it’s worth the work. The alternative to the hard work to make a
relationship work is to exit with all the attendant baggage left in the wake.











