Counterpoint
After the tragic killing of Trayvon Martin and the jury trial that followed, the impassioned response among most black Americans demanded respect for the life of Trayvon and, by extension, respect for our community as a whole. Our message was simple: We are Trayvon. President Obama shared this sentiment when he reflected that Trayvon could have been him 35 years ago.
That's why we were so disappointed to read Peter Bell's commentary ("Blacks must also look inward, at our culture," July 23) in which he scolds black Americans, asking, "how can we ... demand respect from others when we show so little of it for ourselves?"
From arguing that black people don't love themselves enough to berating hip-hop culture, Bell's ramblings either have nothing to do with Trayvon's killing or are just plain wrong.
To start with, Bell points the finger at the black community for protesting the racial prejudice manifested in Trayvon's killing when, he argues, our focus should be on protesting black-on-black violence in our neighborhoods.
It's true — statistically speaking, Trayvon was more likely to be killed by a black peer than by George Zimmerman. And, most agree, there is an epidemic of violence among black youths plaguing our communities and threatening our children's futures. Yet, that's not what happened between Zimmerman and Trayvon in February 2012.
As black leaders in Minneapolis, we've participated at vigils and demonstrations in the aftermath of black-on-black murders in our own neighborhoods. We're heartbroken, outraged, and resolved to build safer communities. But linking Trayvon's killing to a discussion about black-on-black violence completely misses the point and suggests that this unarmed black high school student wasn't the victim of unwarranted violence, but somehow had it coming.
Bell goes on to blame the black community as a whole — or at least black entertainers and their fans — for perpetuating racial disparities and injustices through hip-hop lyrics that devalue life and celebrate violence. Bell's accusation "do we really expect white America not to notice how we present ourselves in public or via popular culture?"smacks of the same ignorance that would accuse victims of sexual violence of "asking for it" because of how they dressed or behaved.