Friday, May 25, 2018

NOT YOUR GRANDFATHER’S ROYAL WEDDING...




(OR YOUR FATHER’S EITHER)

In case you hid under a rock Saturday, May 19, England’s Prince Harry married American actress Meghan Markle, a divorced, 36-year old Northwestern University

graduate who made her name on the USA Network legal drama Suits, playing a paralegal and part-time law firm associate. Those facts alone made for an unusual royal pairing, but that wasn’t the half of it.  The royal couple’s wedding ceremony brought black culture to English royalty and therefore to the world.

The ceremony melded English high church with modern concerns about racial inclusion and honesty about past injustice.  Without sacrificing the dignity of a traditional royal wedding, Meghan and Harry showed the audience we live in a different world.  That process forced British royalty out of its comfort zone.  One of us sent his children a text just after the service observing that this wedding ceremony stretched British stiff upper lips to their snapping point.

As a child of the royal family and a graduate of Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, Prince Harry no doubt brought a keen awareness of Great Britain’s role in the Trans-Atlantic slave trade and its colonization of dozens of countries populated by people of
color. “The sun never sets on the British empire,” went the expression. Even today, Great Britain struggles with identifying what being British means and it maintains immigration practices that favor whites over people of color.  It admits to British Citizenship immigrants from the Caribbean, India, Pakistan and Africa more restrictively than Europeans.

The Homily
First, there was the ceremony’s sermon, officially called an “address,” by Bishop
Michael Curry, the head of the Episcopal Church, the American affiliate of the Anglican Church.  Bishop Curry, the first African American in the post he holds, spoke for 13 plus minutes, too long some critics on social media thought. A conclusion all of us agree with to an extent.  That aside, he relied on the words of Martin Luther King, Jr. and alluded to experiences of slaves in the American Antebellum South.  Most of all, in his delivery and style, he
brought the energy and passion of a black American preacher to the usually staid venue of a British pulpit.  He painted a picture of hope and promise for a better world, if and only if his hearers dedicated themselves to “the redemptive power of love.”  He grounded his message firmly in the New Testament, as informed by Hebrew scripture.

The Choir
No one should find hearing a popular song at the wedding of two thirtysomethings surprising.  Standards from the 60s and 70s, like The Wedding Song (Peter Paul & Mary) and We’ve Only Just Begun (the Carpenters), get played or performed at weddings all the time.  Ben E. King’s 1962 composition Stand By Me qualifies as the kind of popular number anyone going to a wedding of two relatively young people might expect to hear. 

But, this wasn’t just any wedding and the performer wasn’t a friend of the bride who moonlights as a lounge singer.  The Kingdom Choir, a London based gospel group of 20 mostly black singers, did the honors at the royal wedding.  They sang Stand By Me in the soulful, if dignified, tone it deserved.

The Cellist
Prince Harry supposedly gets credit for the appearance of Sheku Kanneh-Mason, the award winning 19-year old British cellist who enthralled the audience with two pieces while the royal couple and their parents signed the wedding register, a requirement of English law that must occur during the ceremony.  Reportedly Harry saw him perform last year and asked Meghan to call him requesting he play at their wedding. 

Millions of people saw and heard things they never would have had they not tuned in to what some regard as a spectacle of unseemly excess.  By insisting her wedding reflect her entire heritage, Meghan taught the world valuable lessons in inclusivity, history, and cultural sensitivity.  Her new husband joined in that endeavor making their wedding a richer experience for his family, his country, and the world.   They’ve done us a favor and deserve a salute for it. 


Unanswered Questions
Did this wedding simply reflect the attitudes of two enlightened millennials or did it serve as a harbinger of the future, where people in countries far and near are judged on matters other than skin color? We certainly can’t equate the marriage of one couple with the election of America’s first African American President, but we see at least one commonality. Many of us hoped and believed Barack Obama’s election meant the dawn of a post-racial America. But with the election of Donald Trump, we just don’t know how to measure progress. Which is stronger, the forces seeking change, or the forces opposing change? Only time will tell. With the Brits, as well, only time will tell.

Friday, May 18, 2018

GETTING THE FACTS WRONG ABOUT HOUSING DISCRIMINATION



In January, we posted “A Little Light Reading: Our Top Three Books on Understanding Race in America.”  We identified three relatively recent works we consider essential for understanding America’s ongoing racial issues. The Warmth of Other Suns, The Half Has Never Been Told, and The Color of Law explore, respectively, the twentieth century black migration from the South, slavery, and housing discrimination.  We intend to return to those books from time to time, exploring their major points and examining their contributions on America’s racial issues.





We start with Richard Rothstein’s The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America.  Rothstein proceeds from a simple point aimed at disabusing many Americans of a myth.  Housing segregation was not, he writes, “merely a project of southerners in the former slaveholding Confederacy.”  It was “a nationwide project of the federal government in the twentieth century, designed and implemented by its most liberal leaders.”  This contention leads to the major theme of The Color of Law – that Supreme Court justices, who’ve ducked imposing broad remedies for the consequences of housing discrimination on the ground government didn’t cause the problem, got their facts wrong.

Rothstein highlights two Supreme Court opinions, 33 years apart, in school desegregation cases in which the justices claimed governmental action wasn’t at fault.  In a 1974 Detroit area case, Justice Potter Stewart declined to include white students from suburban areas in a desegregation plan, concluding African American students were concentrated in the city, not spread throughout the suburbs, because of “unknown and perhaps unknowable factors such as in-migration, birth rates, economic changes, or cumulative acts of private racial fears.”  In 2007, Chief Justice John Roberts rejected desegregation plans in Louisville and Seattle for the same reason.  Housing patterns, he determined, resulted from “private choices,” not governmental action, meaning no “constitutional obligation” required the proposed remedies.  Rothstein devotes the remaining 300 or so pages of Color of Law to proving just how wrong both justices got their facts.


Public Housing = Ghetto
Government policy, beginning with the Franklin Roosevelt administration, forced blacks into urban ghettos, “as big a factor as any” in promoting segregated housing.  As World War II approached, the federal government built housing units for workers
involved in defense-related industries.  Federal policy and practice provided this housing either for whites only or in segregated projects.  Despite the fact both blacks and whites worked in defense plants, nearby government subsidized or constructed housing either served only whites or separated black and white workers.

After the war, congressional Republicans opposed to any federal participation in the housing market, gave progressive legislators a choice – accept segregated housing or get no federal housing program at all.  GOP amendments to the housing bills required desegregation, when everyone knew southern Democrats would kill the legislation if it included such amendments.  Northern and eastern Democrats favoring a public housing program backed down and accepted segregated housing.

A little later, federal regulations set strict upper income limits for public housing residents.  These limits forced middle-income tenants out of most public housing, leaving projects poor and mostly African American.  Taken together, these policies assured segregation in public housing projects in the United States, a result that endures today.

Racial Zoning
Local government actions significantly contributed to America’s segregated housing patterns.  In cities like Baltimore, blatant zoning ordinances stopped the development of integrated neighborhoods.  Baltimore’s ordinance, enacted in 1910, forbade blacks from buying houses on blocks where whites constituted a majority of the residents and vice versa.  These ordinances spread to Atlanta, Miami, St. Louis, Richmond, and other places.  The Supreme Court struck them down in a 1917 case originating in Louisville, Kentucky but, as Rothstein shows, many cities ignored the ruling, claiming their laws differed in some way – usually minor – from the Louisville ordinance.  West Palm Beach, Florida, for example, adopted a racial zoning ordinance 12 years after the Supreme Court decision in the Louisville case and it remained in place until 1960.

Promoting the Suburbs
Public housing policy and local ordinances didn’t stop higher income African Americans from buying houses in certain places, given market forces.  The federal government, however, enforced policies that enticed white families to move to single family homes in suburbs and out of apartments located in cities.  The government then made it exceedingly difficult for blacks to follow suit by implementing blatantly
discriminatory Federal Housing Administration (FHA) lending rules.  The FHA underwriting  manual, first issued in 1935, said, “to retain stability [in a neighborhood] it is necessary that properties shall continue to be occupied by the same social and racial classes” and “a change in…racial occupancy generally leads to instability and a reduction in values.” 
The FHA, therefore, in many instances, just wouldn’t approve loans to black buyers. In connection with a single family housing development in one New Jersey community in the early 1940s, the agency flatly stated “no loans will be given to [black] developments.”  The FHA would approve properties only in neighborhoods where “compatibility” existed among residents.  Generally, this meant whites only.  These discriminatory policies remained in effect well into the 1950s and, in some cases, beyond, locking in segregated housing patterns.

In coming posts, we will explore other ways government policies created segregated housing and examine solutions Rothstein proposes.  Many of those are controversial and we don’t agree among ourselves on the wisdom of many of them.  The problem remains though, and not talking about it or the ways of addressing it, won’t make it go away.