Danielle Ross was alone in an empty room at the Obama campaign headquarters
in Kokomo, Ind., a cellphone in one hand, a voter call list in the other. She was stretched out on the carpeted floor wearing laceless sky-blue Converses, stories from the trail on her mind. It was the day before Indiana's primary, and she had just been chased by dogs while canvassing in a Kokomo suburb. But that was not the worst thing to occur since she postponed her sophomore year at Middle Tennessee State University, in part to hopscotch America stumping for Barack Obama.
Here's the worst: In Muncie, a factory town in the east-central part of Indiana, Ross and her cohorts were soliciting support for Obama at malls, on street corners and in a Wal-Mart parking lot, and they ran into "a horrible response," as Ross put it, a level of anti-black sentiment that none of them had anticipated.
"The first person I encountered was like, 'I'll never vote for a black person,' " recalled Ross, who is white and just turned 20. "People just weren't receptive."
For all the hope and excitement Obama's candidacy is generating, some of his field workers, phone-bank volunteers and campaign surrogates are encountering a raw racism and hostility that have gone largely unnoticed -- and unreported -- this election season. Doors have been slammed in their faces. They've been called racially derogatory names (including the white volunteers). And they've endured malicious rants and ugly stereotyping from people who can't fathom that the senator from Illinois could become the first African American president.
The contrast between the large, adoring crowds Obama draws at public events and the gritty street-level work to win votes is stark. The candidate is largely insulated from the mean-spiritedness that some of his foot soldiers deal with away from the media spotlight.
Victoria Switzer, a retired social studies teacher, was on phone-bank duty one night during the Pennsylvania primary campaign. One night was all she could take: "It wasn't pretty." She made 60 calls to prospective voters in Susquehanna County, her home county, which is 98 percent white. The responses were dispiriting. One caller, Switzer remembers, said he couldn't possibly vote for Obama and concluded: "Hang that darky from a tree!"
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8 comments:
It's pretty sad, and I must be a bit jaded because I don't know how much of this is the real ignorant, scum uttering such inhumane things and hohw much is corporate run campaigns hellbent on denying the voters their choice... I suppose they are one in the same when looked at with my eyes.
Shame on us for not working and striving toward equality of any stripe. Goddamn America indeed!
ABW,
By the way... If you would like to be a regular contrubutor to The Peace Tree, once a week, there are several slots still available. I would love to see (hear) your voice there.
If interested, I could not find an email for you, please write me at prime63@cox.net and let me know if you are interested.
I've been reading your blog now for a month or so and feel your voice would be a powerful addition to our coalition.
Sincerely,
Mark (thepoetryman)
Yikes! I am glad this is coming out! And I am also glad the white folks are experiencing this first hand - let no one mistake that racism doesn't exist.
I agree with you, Miriam. Still, I'm concerned that his ground people were not prepared for this. I'm sorry, but how is this treatment in any way shocking?
This just goes back to an earlier post that I wrote about bigots appropriating progressive rhetoric, in which I lamented that white liberals always seem not to be as savvy as their neoconservative counterparts when it comes to playing racial politics
Yes saddening but not surprising. And we will still see white people commenting all over the internet blogs about how today's racism mainly exists in the minds of African-Americans who "won't let go" of the past.
Hello everyone! [waves}
I think that it says A LOT that the white Obama supporters were so shocked and bewildered when encountering white racism? Are they BLIND to what non-white Americans face in this country?
There was a discussion on my blog with a white woman who served as guest writer and she was sharing her perspectives on race in this country and dynamics with black women and white women and she mentioned that SOME white people really believe that all that racial hatred is "behind us now".
I suppose that this awakening was a positive thing in drawing media attention to the viciousness of racial polarity that still exists in this country.
Some of my exes are white and they have been FLOORED that there are white people who will make blatantly nasty and racist comments in the presence of other whites AS IF they will not incur any backlash because they ASSUME all whites agree with their racial hatred....
Racial hatred is rampant and only when white people encounter it for themselves do they begin to admit that they were in denial about it...
Peace, blessings and DUNAMIS!
Lisa
Hi Mark (a.k.a poetry man)! Sorry to just now have time to catch up on these comments. Thanks for the invitation!
To the owner of this blog, how far youve come?
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