To say that [prejudice] is not our fault does not relieve us of responsibility […] We may not have polluted the air, but we need to take responsibility, along with others, for cleaning it up. Each of us needs to look at our own behavior. Am I perpetuating and reinforcing the negative messages so pervasive in our culture, or am I seeking to challenge them? If I have not been exposed to positive images of marginalized groups, am I seeking them out, expanding my own knowledge base for myself and my children? Am I acknowledging and examining my own prejudices, my own rigid categorizations of others, thereby minimizing the adverse impact they might have on my interactions with those I have categorized? Unless we engage in these and other conscious acts of reflection and reeducation, we easily repeat the process with our children. We teach what we were taught. The unexamined prejudices of the parents are passed on tot he children. It is not our fault, but it is our responsibility to interrupt this cycle.
—
Beverly Daniel Tatum, “Defining Racism: Can We Talk?” (via croatoan)
Last I’m going to say about it.
(via omgthatdress)
(via omgthatdress)
