Mona
Scott-Young and Forest
Whitaker are under attack for their upcoming respective film projects,
“Sorority Sisters” and “Undergrad.” According to some, both of these projects
threaten to tarnish the otherwise good image of Black Greek Letter
organizations (BGLO). Outrage over the projects have sparked at least one petition, and many online and social media discussions. I, a Black
woman in her 30’s—and the member of a BGLO—am not offended, and am hoping that
“Sorority Sisters” and “Undergrad” make it to television and the silver screen
respectively, if for no other reason than on principle alone.
Here is why I #SupportSororitySisters.
Reality television
and silver screen depictions "didn't
start the fire." Triflery and
pettiness have permeated Black female relationships ever since we were taught
to compete with one another during the
Enslavement Process. The piety that belies much (not all) of the criticism
of reality shows and media that show Blacks at their worst is not constructive
because it is shame-based and aimed at covering up—not solving—the problem.
During their discussion of the outrage over “Sorority Sisters” and “Undergrad,”
and the petition during a Huffington
Post Live broadcast, Drs. Marc
Lamont Hill and Ricky Jones
suggested that naysayers’ efforts to quell these projects are simply attempts
to police the image of middle and upper class Blacks, and more specifically,
organizations like BGLOs and historically Black colleges (HBC), which have long
been symbols of the ability of Blacks to achieve middle and upper class strata.
Drs. Hill and Jones seemed to further suggest that at least some of the
criticism is the product of some people’s notion that Black elite organizations
should somehow be exempt from stereotyping.
I agree with Drs. Hill and Jones’ assessment, and I disagree
with the exemption. One of the biggest problems we have in the “Black”
community is our psychotic tendency to “other” each other, and to not speak up
about an issue until we are personally affected. We learned this during Slavery
when we were taught to live in survival mode—and when we were taught to mimic
our enslavers’ philosophy that in order for there to be winners there have to
be losers. Further, the term “stereotyping” in the petition is
being used loosely. We have to break away from the habit of excusing ourselves
from addressing real problems by pointing to our hurt feelings. Every time
someone presents an inconvenient truth—one that is contrary to what we want to
believe about ourselves—we claim the defense of “offense.” Blacks aren’t the
only ones who do this. Whites and others do this, too.
This is not to say that the depictions in “Sorority
Sisters,” “Undergrad,” and other “reality” shows and media depictions are true.
There are some BGLO members that only
live up to the ideals their founders envisioned—whose hard work and
professional and personal conduct set a standard for us all. But this is not
the case for all, and nobody is, or should be, surprised by this. This is just
like the many Blacks who claim to be “saved,” and claim to be Christians, but
their behavior is the direct antithesis of what everybody knows about how
Christians are supposed to live. Certainly, there are some Christians (very,
very few) who talk the talk and walk the walk, but they can’t oppose others’
observations that some Christians are hypocrites. Emotional responses keep us
from addressing real problems and perpetuate the idea that we lack the ability
to analyze.
And about middle and upper class Blacks being exempt: Aren’t many of the cast members on Real Housewives of Atlanta and Basketball Wives upper class? Many of
them are college—and beyond—educated, and many own their own businesses. What
exactly is middle and upper class anyway?
We need this mirror. Maybe people seeing behavior they engage in
acted out by others will be an impetus for change. Even reality “stars” have
commented that seeing themselves act the way they have on television has
provoked a desire to change. Further, I would bet a lot of things that many of
the same people who are rallying against “Sorority Sisters” and “Undergrad”
regularly indulge in other reality shows that “depict” Black females in a
negative way. This sentiment was expressed by some of those who posted comments
to the Huffington
Post Live broadcast.
And if the opposition to “Sorority Sisters” is really about
the image of the African-American (I prefer to say “Black”), then anyone who
expressed opposition to “Sorority Sisters” ought not to be indulgers of any
other reality shows that show us at our worst—which include but are not limited
to: any of the “Real Housewives”
franchise shows, the “Basketball Wives” shows; and opponents ought to have
expressed dissatisfaction with the “change” petition concerning Blue Ivy's hair—because
nothing makes us looks worse than earnestly taking the time to create and
circulate a petition about something as frivolous as a child’s hair. (I started not to even include a link to that
petition, but that would have been the type of emotional response I argue
against.)
And these same opponents ought to have expressed discontent
over the
issue that was made over Olympic gold medalist Gabrielle Douglas' hair when she
made history a few summers ago. Black Greeks and non-Greeks indulge in
reality television and participate in frivolity.
Triflery and pettiness is not class-based. I know plenty of well-pedigreed professionals
who get upset because someone walked in the room without “speaking,” for
instance, and who talk about others’ choice of outfit, and other frivolous
topics that will not make or break anybody’s existence.
I don’t know what Ms. Scott-Young’s motive was for creating
“Sorority Sisters,” but I don’t agree with knocking someone’s hustle because
you want to police an image that may or may not be far from an inconvenient
truth.
We’re not fooling
anybody. Even people outside of the Black Greek Life culture, who are aware
of the intentions of BGLO founders, know that all Black Greeks do not live up
to the ideals they pledged to uphold. Many BGLOs are said to be founded on
Christian principles, yet there are many members who conduct themselves in
opposition to such principles—in ways that include, but are not limited to: engaging
in (lots of) casual sex; gossiping; allowing feelings of jealousy and envy to
impact how they treat others; displaying prejudice against others based on
ethnic, physical, and other differences; and gluttony (obesity). (Blacks’
confusion about what Christianity is and means accounts for a lot of this
hypocrisy, but that’s another topic, for another blog.) Do you know any Black
Greeks that have borne children out of wedlock? Do you know any that have
multiple children with different parents? Do you know any that gossip? Any
overweight? Have you ever heard a Black Greek comment that another didn’t
pledge “properly?” Are any of your answers to the previous questions different
than what they would have been had you not seen the trailer for “Sorority
Sisters?” Nobody’s reality is shaken by what they see about us on television.
This display of consciousness to cover up an obvious
demonstration of unconsciousness is taking our focus away from the real
issue—the fact that we have more serious problems than what people think about
us. We should have a problem with who we are and what we have become. We are those females (I use the word
“woman” and “women” carefully) in that trailer. When I see my counterparts
depicted in reality shows, I sadly—with all of my education and professional
experiences—have flashbacks of being mistreated by my Greek and non-Greek
“sisters.” And it’s not because I’m hanging out with the wrong people. It’s
because Blacks as a mass have not recovered from the psychological impact of
the Enslavement Process, and most of us are still operating like the
self-hating slaves we were taught to be. This dysfunctional psychology is not
particular to any class or socio-economic status. Post-Traumatic
Slave Syndrome has no respect of Black persons. Because it is so pervasive,
I am not able to control when I will encounter a “sister”—Greek or not—that is
going to judge my speech pattern, dress, other physical characteristic, or
something she has heard about me, and accuse me of thinking that I’m better
than she is, or worse—mistreat me because of her inferiority complex.
The “united front” we—Greeks and non-Greeks—try to show is
killing us, because it prevents us from solving the root cause of problems. Hugging
and kissing each other “on the yard” so on-lookers think an unbreakable bond
exists that in reality doesn’t, is a waste of everybody’s time—which is not to
say that sometimes such a bond doesn’t exist.
Reality shows don’t trash our image. We’ve done that
already, by not recovering from the psychological impact of the Enslavement
Process, and allowing the dysfunction we were taught to live under during that
time to continually be perpetuated. Some people have just been smart enough to
pick up a camera and make money off it. And if our BGLOs are so untouchable and
filled with the talented
tenth of us—how come any members are even signing up to be a part of Ms.
Scott-Young’s projects and “performing” for them? Folks would have been better
off skipping the petitions, and simply convening regional meetings to discuss
how Black Greek life got so far away from what BGLO founders intended.
When we change who we are,
our conduct and subsequent image will naturally change with it. We won’t have
to worry about being embarrassed by desperate wanna-be celebrities who think
that their path out of poverty is performing in ways that reflect the worst of
us. We won’t have to worry about any of “us” taking to social media with
frivolous petitions about individual characteristics, like hair, that speak
nothing about a person’s potential or worth. But this mass change has not
happened yet, partly because we have concerned ourselves more with image than with
substance.
And let’s be honest:
a lot of the concern about our image is directly related to what we want
Whites to think about us. If “Sorority Sisters” were just a show that Blacks
could access, I can almost guarantee you that the present backlash would be
non-existent. We might be a little bit concerned about what Black non-Greeks
would think. But with Whites being able to access any channel on television, just
as Blacks, there’s a chance they might think that our elite organizations
aren’t what we’ve been saying they are. Newsflash though: When Whites see us
convening our bourgeoisie conventions at local hotels and convention centers,
and producing elaborate award shows, they don’t think that those of us
attending are any better than those of us that can’t afford to attend—they
think its funny that we spend all of this money to convince them that we can
shine just like them when we get all dressed up when: A) they already know this
to be the case, so we’re wasting our time trying to impress them; B) there are
so many more Blacks that are suffering; and C) as soon as the lights go out and
the right song comes on, we can be just as ratchet as “the others.” Don’t worry: Whites already know that “all Blacks aren’t
like that.”
This concern about what Whites think about us is probably
what drove the
petition about Blue Ivy's hair. We know that Jay-Z and Beyonce’s family is
popular amongst Whites and Blacks, and we don’t want Whites seeing us with our
hair “all messed up.”
The pretention that belies the motivation to petition
against something like “Sorority Sisters” and “images that depict Blacks in a
negative way” is a waste of time. Blacks and Whites alike already know that all
BGLO members aren’t ridiculous.
If the concept behind “Sorority Sisters” were a complete
distortion, and that distortion had the potential to impact people’s view of an
otherwise unblemished institution, there would possibly be cause for alarm. But
Black Greeks and Non-Greeks alike have witnessed Black Greeks engaging in
injurious conduct long before the “Sorority Sisters” trailer came out. For
instance, Greeks and Non-Greeks have witnessed dissatisfied members ripping
“letters” from other members because one doesn’t approve of the other’s
membership. Dr. Marc Lamont Hill mentioned
this while discussing the outrage over “Sorority Sisters” during the Huffington
Post Live broadcast. (I don’t think any BGLO founder would be happy about
the arrogance that drives these sorts of attacks among members.)
Pretention wasn’t a part of our founders’ plans, problem
resolution was. The founders of BGLOs intended to encourage those of us who are
able, to cooperate to solve problems affecting all of us. They had very
specific plans in mind for determining who was worthy of engaging in such
struggles. Again, as some folks started to concern themselves more with image
than with substance, even those plans changed. (But I highly doubt that any BGLO
founders would be satisfied with members ripping “letters” off of other members
when becoming a member means working cooperatively with all other members.
Where is the sisterhood or brotherhood in alerting others—Greek and
non-Greek—of another member’s route to membership, and your humble disapproval
of it?)
Further, and most strikingly, this whole situation is an
example of “us” (Blacks) not all being on the same page. If we were all (Greek
and non-Greek) as sophisticated as we’d like to believe we are—and as
sophisticated as we want each other and others to believe—none of us would sign
up to “perform” in any reality shows, we wouldn’t have to worry about anybody
petitioning through social media about frivolous topics, and we wouldn’t have
to worry about that one inarticulate, toothless witness news reporters always
seem to find to describe what happened—because he or she wouldn’t exist.
Shutting down projects that publish “somebody’s” truth does
more harm than good. It perpetuates dysfunctional unified fronts, encourages
dishonesty, and prevents problems from being solved—and problem solving was
exactly what our predecessors intended.
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