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So I'm driving down the street with my 4-year-old nephew.
He, knocking back a juice box, me, a Snapple, today y'all
we are doing manly ***. I love watching the way his mind works.
He asks a million questions. Uncle, why is the sky blue?
Uncle, how do cars go? Uncle, why don't dogs talk?
Uncle, uncle, uncle, he asks, uncle, uncle, uncle, he asks
uncle uncle uncle as if his voice box is
a warped record. I try my best to answer every question, I do.
I say it's because the way the sun lights up the outer space.
It's because engines make the wheels go.
It's because their minds aren't quite like ours. I say Yes.
No. No. Yes. No. Yes. No. I don't know. Who knows? Maybe. We laugh.
He smiles at me, looks out the window, spots a cop car, drops his seat
and says, "Oh man, Uncle, 5-0, we gotta hide."
I'll be honest. I'm not happy with the way we raise our Black boys.
Don't like the fact that he learned to hide
from the cops well before he knew how to read.
Angrier that his survival depends more on
his ability to deal with the "authorities"
than it does his own literacy. "Get up," I yell at him. "In this car, in
this family, we are not afraid
of the law." I wonder if he can hear
the uncertainty in my voice. Is today the day he learns
that uncle is willing to lie to him, that I am more human
than hero? We both know the truth
is far more complex than do not hide. We both know too many
Black boys who disappeared. Names lost.
Know too many Trayvon Martins Oscar Grants
and Abner Louimas, know too many Sean Bells, and Amadou Diallos
Know too well that we are the hard-boiled sons of Emmett Till.
Still, we both know it's not about whether or not
the shooter is racist, it's about how poor Black boys
are treated as problems well before we are treated as people.
Black boys in this country cannot afford
to play cops and robbers if we're always considered the latter,
don't have the luxury of playing war
when we're already in one. Where I'm from,
seeing cop cars drive down the street feels a lot
like low-flying planes in New York City. Where I'm from, routine traffic
stops are more like mine fields, any wrong move
could very well mean your life. And how do I look my nephew in his apple face
and tell him to be strong when we both know black boys are murdered every day, simply
for standing up for themselves? I take him by the hand, I say
be strong. I say be smart. Be kind, and polite. Know your laws. Be aware of
how quickly your hands move to pocket for wallet or ID,
be more aware of how quickly the officer's hand moves to holster, for gun.
Be Black. Be a boy and have fun, because this world will force you to
become a man far more quickly than you'll ever have the need to. He lets go of my hand.
"But Uncle," he asks, "Uncle, what happens if the cop is really mean?"
And, it scares me to know that he, like
so many Black boys, is getting ready for a war
I can't prepare him for.