brotherpeacemaker

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The Human Stain Part I – The Freedom To Not Be Black

the-human-stain

The Human Stain is a movie featuring Anthony Hopkins as Coleman Silk, a mulatto passing for a white man.  The movie starts with Mr. Silk as a college professor who makes the poor choice of using a blatant racial slur in reference to two students missing from his classroom roster who just so happen to be black.  Mr. Silk asked his class if the two names listed actually referred to students or spooks.  He is brought before the college administrators who suspect his poor choice of words as racism.  In anger he quits.  He goes home all worked up in a rabid lather and gets his wife all worked up and excited as well.  In all the excitement, his wife suffers a massive heart attack and suddenly dies in his arms.  All of this happens in the first five minutes of the show.  But believe it or not, the movie moves at a very deliberate pace.

Through the remainder of the film we see Coleman Silk in various stages of his life.  He grows up with two obviously black parents and an obviously black brother and sister.  His father was an optometrist who lost his business during the depression and had to get a job working as a waiter in the dining car of a railroad.  At this time of his life, Coleman is a promising pugilist who doesn’t have a lot of size but has a good combination of speed and strength giving him the advantage of surprise.  Dad doesn’t approve of his son being a boxer.  But dad suffers a heart attack while working the train and dies.  Coleman decides to go off to the army to get the funds for his education.  There’s a scene where he is sitting at the recruiter’s desk studying the entry form.  He is hesitating on the question of race.  He looks around.  No one knows him and no one known any of his secrets.  He marks the box indicating he was white.  The recruiter extends his hand and welcomes Coleman into the service.

We see another part of Coleman’s past.  He’s in college.  He falls in love with a girl.  They have a beautiful and very romantic relationship.  She’s white, but she’s the one.  He takes her to see his mother.  The girl is excited.  They are holding hands almost the entire way.  But when the girl sees a black woman open the door and Coleman introduces her as his mother, things change.  The white girl goes through the masquerade of pretending everything is okay.  But as they go back home, she is repulsed.  Their relationship is over.  And Coleman has difficulty dealing with the hurt of rejection.

Shortly thereafter Coleman’s back in the ring.  He’s about to fight with a good sized visibly black boxer.  Word is that he’s strong and slow.  Coleman can beat him easily.  His coach tells him to give the people a good show.  Draw the fight out and then finish the guy in the fourth or fifth round.  But when the opening bell sounds, Coleman steps to the guy and kicks his ass as if he stole something from him.  The big guy is knocked out early in the first round.  The coach is furious.  Why didn’t Coleman stick to the game plan?  Coleman tells his coach that he isn’t going to carry some nigger just so he can put on a good show.  The word nigger comes out with such vehemence it takes the coach’s assistant, who is black, by surprise.

Eventually Coleman finds another love.  Again, she is white.  This is the woman that will become his wife and who will eventually die in the scene at the very beginning of the film.  But instead of taking her to see his mother he tells his mother that he told his new young love that his mother was dead.  He doesn’t want to take a chance of losing his newfound love so in order to avoid the pain of rejection he rejects his mother.  He tells his mother that he needs to cut her, and the black part of his life, out of his life.  His mother was noticeably hurt but she was never angry.  She simply tells her son that she never thought of him as black or white but just as her son.  Coleman’s brother however is highly enraged.  He pays Coleman a visit at his apartment.  The brother tells Coleman not to ever show his lily white face at their mother’s house ever again.

I found Coleman Silk a disgusting excuse of a black man and as a person.  But more importantly, I found Coleman’s mother even more disgusting.  Coleman’s parents never bothered to imbue their son with a sense of pride in his blackness.  Therefore, Coleman grew up seeing his blackness as a hindrance instead of as something to be proud of.  When Coleman’s father loses his business as an optometrist and becomes a porter, a job befitting a black man, it wasn’t a stain on society but a stain on being black.  Coleman saw the impact of being black had on his father which is why he enlisted into the army as a white man.  When his first love rejected him for his blackness, the problem wasn’t her fucked up perception on people, but his totally fucked up perception that his blackness was his weakness.

When his mother told him that she never saw her son as white or black, what she meant to say was that she was hoping he would take the easy route.  She wasn’t exactly rejecting her son’s blackness.  She simply gave her son no reason to accept his blackness.  So instead of learning to be a proud black man or even an embarrassed black man or even remotely associated as a black man, Coleman Silk became a white man who manifested his true hatred of himself as a hatred for black people.  Thanks mom!

While the Human Stain is a work of fiction, it covers a subject that plays itself out all too often in the black community.  So many black people reject their association or affiliation with the black community at their first opportunity.  All too often successful black people work hard to separate themselves from the black community finding their own get out of blackness card.  And these days, all too often black people will say that the best thing we can do for the black community is get an education or get a successful job and leave other black people behind.  And all too often black people are in situations where they have a choice to be proud of blackness and deal with the consequence of being black or to pull a Coleman and mentally check the box that says we want to assimilate into society proper free of our ethnic baggage that holds us back.

And given an opportunity, all too often black people who make the choice to assimilate will prove their devotion to orthodox thought patterns dictated by a society where black people are regularly regulated to the back of social standards, we are quick to refer to other black people in manners that are just as disrespectful as a black man passing as a white man using the word spook to refer to other black people.  Instead of working hard to change the conditions that make it more difficult for black people we’d rather pretend we don’t see the problems as we assimilate into the racially generic whole that works so hard to make black people reject their blackness.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009 - Posted by brotherpeacemaker | African Americans, Black Community, Black Men, Black People, Life, Racism, Thoughts | | 4 Comments

4 Comments »

  1. Too true and true too often! sad

    Comment by louise | Wednesday, April 15, 2009 | Reply

  2. Great post. I saw the movie as well and Coleman was definitely NOT a mulatto. Which would mean that one of his parents was white. The fact is that he was more of some sort of octoroon or quadroon. He might have had a white grandparent on one side or both. He was playing the role even harder knowing this.

    Also, I found it just incredulous that the producers/writers or whoever found it necessary for them to have Coleman’s black sister to justify his spook statement. Because of the fact that he’s black saying spook didn’t mean anything and he could have cleared that right up with the release of his racial secret.

    The problem is, did he not mean it when the word nigger rolled off his tongue so easily earlier. Not to mention he didn’t give away his racial secret though. So it doesn’t matter what he meant or didn’t mean, that school had every right to reprimand him. He chose that word and his life, they didn’t.

    Also, what was the moral of his racial lies? Because from what I saw there really was no drawback to his lies. He led a perfectly happy, healthy and prosperous life as a white man. So what I got out of it was that if we are just willing to cut the black community loose as quickly as we can, we too can live the high life amongst our so called white counterparts.

    This movie was full of holes and bunk. His parents brought this on themselves by trying to be so bourgeoisie. And yes Coleman was a raging racist. He hated blacks and he hated himself for being black. He had every intention of going white from the get go. And that is a shame.

    You are totally right that his parents never showed him anything positive in being black. He was shown that everything positive is held in the hands of the white people he aspired to be.

    Sorry to be so long winded but this movie really rubbed me the wrong way. It was indicative of the problems we have.

    Thanks

    Comment by theblacksentinel | Wednesday, April 15, 2009 | Reply

  3. That movie was shit. Propaganda in a neat little package.
    I’ve got a blog now

    http://alwaysrealtalk.blogspot.com/

    Peace

    Comment by Shabazz | Wednesday, April 15, 2009 | Reply

  4. I’m not a follower of this blog but I google searched for an article about the movie and about a white man playing a role as a black man, at first I thought of the movie Tropic Thunder with Robert Downey Jr. (that movie made me laugh). I was not raised as a black man, I was raised as a mexican and filipino but I always knew that I have black blood from my grandfather and also other traces to other races from other grandparents, black being the most talked about from friends/family. I wont repeat the countless conversations I have had regarding my association with race that I have had with my blood brothers and my parents and a few understanding cousins who are now also exploring their mixed race identities, although both parents are from the same nation, they are now looking back at where their grandparents and their parents have come from.

    My point is that, based off previous comments, I understand what the character, the mother of Coleman, was trying to do. She just wanted her son to be a normal and accepted human being without looking at race as an issue. Also just as other comments say, Coleman saw the ill effects that society has placed on the black man in America so to him he needed an explanation. But rather than receiving any rational explanation from his mother or seeking guidance, he made the choice at an early age to pass as a white man and has placed his anger back out on the black race.

    Who has the answers to all the racial struggles in America or in the World? Sometimes we can deny race, or look past race. An optimist would say that we can get past it. A realist who follows history I think can say that race will never go away and whatever nation conquers another, the matter of race will always be around…Look at Jesus’ time and the Jews, Look at Spain conquering Latin America and those racial struggles and practically the invention of the word “mulatto”, Nazi Germany, even in a country where people were of the same skin color, their was hate amongst race (and religion).

    So was Coleman’s mother wrong in saying not to think of himself as a black nor a white man? Or was she simply trying to protect her child from the pain she has suffered or has seen throughout history?

    -this is a long thought, thanks for reading.

    Comment by J | Wednesday, November 18, 2009 | Reply


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