Guest MINDSETTER™ Chace Baptista: Rhode Island Might be Different

Guest MINDSETTER™ Chace Baptista

Guest MINDSETTER™ Chace Baptista: Rhode Island Might be Different

When Dylan Roof walked into the Emanuel A.M.E. Church in Charleston, South Carolina during Bible study and murdered nine parishioners on the evening of June 17th, he did so as a terrorist. He did so with the intent to send a message to every citizen in America. His goal was to ignite the flames of a racial divide that many proclaim does not exist yet consistently rears it head ever so often. His attack sent a shockwave not only through South Carolina but throughout the entire nation.  

I awoke on the Friday following the massacre in tears. I could not stop weeping. I saw my grandmother, my aunts, and my church family senselessly murdered. I saw the backbone of my community ruthlessly stolen from me. I could see the way that he was greeted when he walked in. How he was likely offered food if members had any. How they most likely asked him if he wanted to pray with them. I could not fight back the tears and felt compelled to ask what the State of Rhode Island was going to do to honor the victims of the Charleston massacre.

The answer that I received was nothing---something felt fundamentally wrong to me about that response. How could our state do nothing? Rhode Island citizens were impacted especially those of color. How could all of this pain exist within our state and we not acknowledge that pain. That was the question that I began asking some of our elected officials. It started with Representatives Aaron Regunberg, Joe Almeida, Grace Diaz and other members of the Minority Legislative Caucus, finally culminating with Governor Raimondo's office. I had one simple request, "Can we lower the state flags to half-mast to honor the lives taken in Charleston?"

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Rhode Island Responds

When people look at the #blacklivesmatter movement, they think about the demonstrations, marches, and actions around the country. They see black people chaining themselves to interstate medians. Young organizers are laying down in front of traffic, literally risking their lives to bring attention to issues that are happening in within the African American community. While the requests vary from improving police community relations to ending mandatory minimum sentencing, and ending the school to prison pipeline. The cornerstone and first request of the black lives matter movement is that we want to be heard. That our lives matter. That America specifically white America and others will listen, to the pain, joys, and struggles of the black experience. Without inserting their experience and perspective, because we have heard the perspective of white American's since the inception of our country.

The first step to crossing the divide that exists due to our history and unintentional biases is to acknowledge that hurt when it is present. Rightfully so, our State Reps and our Governor responded accordingly, by being, I believe, the only state that lowered the state flags in honor of the victims in South Carolina that was not named South Carolina. With the Supreme Court ruling in favor of same-sex marriage and Obamacare being legal, the State of Rhode Island made a simple yet impactful gesture to its citizens, and the nation, that shows that Rhode Island might be different. Fifty states in the nation and only one that I know of chose to acknowledge the lives of those lost in SC officially.  

Our state's gesture acknowledges that #blacklivesmatter. I believe that this gesture is a start that will bridge the racial divide that not only exists here in our great state but nationally as well. There was a time in Rhode Island's history where I would have been labeled as "crazy" for asking what we, as a state were doing, to acknowledge what happened in South Carolina. As a result of the actions of our Governor, and our State Representatives, we've taken the very small step of acknowledging the loss of black life. It's my hope that we continue to build on the momentum generated by this small gesture to achieve true racial equity. 

Chace Baptista is a Community Organizer and owner of Chace Allen Consulting


Male African American Leaders in RI - 2015

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