It is
simply not enough to proclaim that all black lives matter when clearly not all
black bodies matter in our collective conception and articulation of black liberation.
As it stands, our conception and articulation of black liberation, not just in
the United States but across the globe, currently suffers from a profound
failure to engage disability as a site of struggle, resistance and
transformation. This despite the fact that Black disabled people everywhere are
on the receiving end of the cruelest forms of neglect, violence, and
destitution. A serious engagement with disability, and the lives of sick and
disabled Black people, would mean a more expansive view of what constitutes
activism and resistance, and in the process move us all toward an entirely new
and more beautiful conception of Black liberation at large.
It would
seem as though the only thing we have in response to large scale injustice and
inequality is our bodies. It is no wonder that our conception of activism and
liberation is grounded in the body. In this way, bodies animate political
conviction. Movements for social and economic justice tend to mean the
convergence of bodies sprawled out on the streets in righteous indignation and
protest. Fists thumping in the air. People kicking and screaming as law
enforcement officers violently disperse crowds. Protesters shoved into the back
of police vehicles. Young activists in holding cells waiting to be bailed out.
This is what comes to mind when one thinks of activism that is imbued with the
promise of revolution. The body is the thread that weaves together these
images. But not just any body. It is the non-disabled body that seems to give
meaning to our collective definition of activism and resistance. This default
to the non-disabled body is what I call ableism.
A number
of questions arise from the ways in which ableism structures dominant
conceptions of activism and resistance. What do revolutionaries look like? Why
the insistence that revolutionaries need to “look” a certain way? Why is a
vision of liberation predicated upon “seeing” in the first place? What does it
mean when bodies are not able to “fight back” in the way that ableism defines what
counts as fighting back? Why the assumption of non-disabled ways of being? If I
organize from bed because I live with chronic pain and my body hurts too much
will I still be regarded as an activist? What would organizing from bed mean
for redefining what organizing means in general? What if going to prison for my
political beliefs is just not an option for me because prisons don’t come
staffed with personal attendants? Will I still be regarded as deeply committed
to the struggle for social and economic justice? Not that I want prisons to be
staffed with personal attendants, let alone exist at all. On this point, what
would it mean to understand prison abolition politics through the prism of the
deinstitutionalization of sick and disabled people? What if disability was the
starting point for re-imagining the world? What if we stopped conflating
disability with blackness and instead honored and affirmed the lives of actual
Black people who exist at the intersection of disability and blackness?I don’t
have the answers to all these questions and in some way I feel that asking
these questions without offering answers is what is truly needed in this
moment. All of us have a stake in thinking through how we all get free.
Black
disabled people are not just made to disappear from public view, they are also
made to disappear from the imagination. This is the definition of violence. To
make Black disabled life unfathomable in our conception of activism and
resistance is to fundamentally undermine the possibility of Black liberation,
for this practice is a haunting that will make Black liberation itself
unfathomable too.
This post
is part of the “Black Future Month” series produced by The Huffington Post and Black Lives Matter Network for Black History
Month. Each day in February, this series will look at one of 29 different
cultural and political issues affecting Black lives, from education to
criminal-justice reform. To follow the conversation on Twitter, view #BlackFutureMonth.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eddie-ndopu/black-and-disabled_b_9221756.html
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