u s By Michael Caldwell Contributor A few days ago I was looking through someold Y ackety Y acks. For those of you who have no idea what the hell I just said, the Yack- ety Yack is the name of our year book, unfortimate as this nnay be. As I was thumlHng through a 1979 volume, I saw some pictures of a group of black students protest ing on the steps of South Build ing. Written on a picket sign one student held was, “We need an Afro-American Studies Depart ment!” 1 was dumbfounded. It is 1991. We still do not have an Afro-American Studies Depart ment. 11 years. No progress. In the early 1980s, many stu dents (I, sadly, can’t say most or all) asked the University to pro vide a permanent facility for a Black Cultural Center. It is 1991. We still do not have a pennanent Black Cultural Center. 10 years. No progress. Several years ago, many stu dents (again, I can’t say most or all) asked the University to hire a full-time tenured Native Amai- can professor. It is 1991. No full time Native American jwofessOT. Years go by. No jwogress. There is a store on West Fran klin Street caUed Lavender’s. As I was walking to my car, I noticed that in its display window stood a small statue of a monkey in a butler’s uniform carrying atray of drinks. I walked in the store and toW the clerk that the statue was racist because I thought itdq)icted a black butler as a monkey. He "Sadly, most whites aren't sensi tive to minor instances of racism which surround someone who happens to have dark skin ..." completely disagreed. Perh^ you disagree. But here is an undeniable and ^jpalling fact There are minority students at this university who, because of all the minor, insignifi cant, trivial, superfluous and “iso lated” instances of racism that they experience on a regular basis within this community, wish they could transfer to anothCT univCT- sity. Or worse yet, there are those who drop out. Do you have any idea whatsoever how it feels to be Sadly, most whiles aren’t sensi tive to all these minor instances of racism which surround someone who happens to have dark skin and make him want to leave. Julia Balk was not sensitive to all the images and thoughts which are offensive to African-Americans. Either that or she knew “The Student Body would offend people as racist and decided to submit the work any way. (Excuse me, but if I remem ber correctly, wwen’t the statues supposed to be movedl) Endsights told by your university that you don’t belong? That you aren’t wanted? That you will not be fully treated as a human being, but only as an inferior semblance of one behindadaik-skinnedface. Idon’t I don’t have to deal with “vibes.” (I suppose some of you don’t know what I’m talking about.) I don’t have to deal with the cold stares. I don’t have to deal with the fear of approaching a white person and not knowing if that person will hurt me (a certain look is all it takes) or help me. Understand this, and you will understand why niany students of color choose to walk an extra 15 minutes to class each riKMning and why they want a home where thwe are “allies.” Often the biggest difference between whites arnl nonwhites is not skin color, but the level of sensitivity to what it is like to be Afirican-American, or Asian, or Hi^anic, w Native American. In 1979, it seems that when thCTe was an injustice, students protested to end that injustice. We could learn from that time and those who lived during it We must try harder and protest louder when there is no department of Afro- American Studies. When there is no Black Cultural Center. When there are no Native American professors. When there is no mul ticulturalcurriculum. When people are depicted as monkeys. When campus buildings are named after racists. You do not have the privilege to protest injustice, you have the obligation. More importantly, you have the obligation to learn about the feelings and concerns of those who are the targets of racism. This must be done if we are to make progress toward thecreation of a j ust university and a just wotW, Express yourself about issues that concern Black Ink readers. Feel free to contribute. Drop articles by Suite 108-D Student Union, or mail to Black Ink, CB# 5210, Student Union, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. Appreciate Education Shortly after I graduated from high school last sping, a wonder ful thing happened to me: I rediscovered my love of reading. Dur ing my high school years, I had svapped reading, painfully avoid ing academic pursuits beyond what was done in the classroom and what needed to be done at hcmic to maintain decent grades. My childhood love of reading—few pleasure—was lost Now, for the ast several months, I have been horrified to consider that I might never make up for those “lost" years. Certainly, however, I will try. TTiis January, I finally got around to reading two books my mother had Icmg ago recOTimended: Ke^firBoy and K(^r Boy in America, both by the black South African Mark Mathabane, who now resides in Kemersville. His first bocdc describes his experi ences growing up under South Africa’s system rf apartheid. Its sequel relates Mathrf>ane’s later experiences in America, often comparing and amtrasting race relatiwis in America to race rela* ttons in South Africa. The term “kaffir boy” is a term that white South Africois use in the sime context as many white Americans use “nigger” in ^leaking about African-Americans. Circumstances dictated that only nine days after I had finished reading his second autobiography, Mathabane would speak on this campus. As one of the two keynote speakers fw Race Relations Week 1991, Mathabane ^ke Feb. 19 in Hill Hall. He had spoken at N.C. A&T State University last semester, but I found out too late to attend. But having read both of his autobiogra|Aics since then, was that much more Interested and excited about hearing him speak. Although I had read about his uncertainty toward religion, after hearing him speak, I csmnot imagine that he does not have some cind of special relationship with the Creator, wheth« Mathabane [limself is aware of that relationship or not. There is a certain calm to his soft-spoken nature that is unimaginable within a person who has had to endure the conditions of a system as oppressive as apartheid. And yet he possesses undeniable power and passion as well. To kxA « his anall body and listen to his pioper voice, you wouldn’t think such an impression could be made. But for myself and several others, Mathabane does leave a defmite impression. A very positive impression. Few emphasize education, particularly reading, with such genuine sincerity and with such noticeable appreciation of its merits. In America, IknOw many of usaeguilty of notanHBciating and taking advantage crfeducatkMialopportoBities that many do not have at all. Besides, the goal that we sdl become “Mnart” through education, particulariy through reading, has the potential to make us better able to understand and r^atc to others—if we are open- minded. From my one semester completed here at UNC, I don’t doubt that many students will read fewer books and attend fewer cultural events than the numbo’ of parties they will attend and the number of beers they will drink. At the same time, underprivileged people around the globe (including in South Africa and America), won’t ever have a decent opportunity even to imagine attending a univer sity, never mind actually attending one. Our college years are a time for soul-searching, Onding out whom we really are. A time (or asking questions. A time for exposing ourselves to as many different ideas, experiences and perspectives as possible. One of the most important issues for us to consider is race relations. When a p«son considers the stale of this nation’s racc relations, the question arises, “Where are we going?” I believe the answer to that question is: “Backwatls,’* PresidCTts Reagan and Bush have both, at bea. Ignored racc relations. As a result, things have gotten jwogressively worse. And that tr«id shows no sign of letting up. We must demand that racial concerns be addressed at every level, by politicians and the general public both. Kimberly EUing' see” Appreciating Education," p. 12 Black Ink March 4,1991