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Black Lives Matter: The Role of International Allies

I often think about what it means to be a truly good ally. As we seek justice and advocate for those groups that find themselves on th...

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

#BlackLivesMatter

We white people live in a beautiful world – the world where all lives matter and all men are created equal, the world where the justice system is just about as fair and balanced as Fox News, the world where the only thing we see with an ever-increasing eagerness is our own color-blindness.

But this world is nothing but our collective dream, the same dream that we so greedily devoured and so cheerfully co-opted from the non-violent Dr. King for our not-so-non-violent purposes, the same dream that stands between the world and Coates.

In that world there’s no room for the people whose only ‘sin’ and whose only shield is their black skin, for whom red, white and blue is not so much the color of the stars and stripes as it is of a police car lights. No room for ‘person’ in black personhood and ‘child’ in black childhood, there’s only enough room for the ‘hood’.

This is the world we built and have sustained for so long, the dream we have been so meticulously sugarcoating and whitewashing. Now it is our responsibility to dismantle it and to contribute to creating something that is as beautiful as the dreams we live. It is the time when we should feel outraged, and channel that feeling into a constructive force. It is the moment for us to wake up and start living a life that will make our beliefs a reality.

#TamirRice #BlackLivesMatter

Thursday, November 19, 2015

The Thing Around Your Neck

Just finished reading ‘The Thing Around Your Neck’ by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. After reading ‘Half of a Yellow Sun’ and ‘Americanah’ I fell in love with her narratives and the messages behind them, her personality that informs her works with a distinct character and her talent that binds words and sentences into gripping meaningful stories. I searched for the other two books for a long time and finally found them.

As part of my Introduction to Creative Writing class I tried to write a short story for the first time a few weeks ago. It wasn’t an easy thing to do, and I don’t think I did a particularly good job. But what’s important is that now I read books differently – ‘read as a writer and write as a reader’ is the motto of Professor Fred D’Aguiar teaching the class. And indeed it was fascinating to read this collection of short stories by one of my favorite contemporary writers from this perspective. I bet it’s not easy to write a good story for anybody, but putting it together in such a way that it appears to have been written easily, effortlessly – this is art.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie certainly mastered this art to perfection. Of course, it’s impossible to separate the form, the literary side of the story from it’s contents. And this is where it gets even better. She deals with the subjects that I want to explore, something that fascinates and makes me think.

Every story is precious in its own way. The two that impressed me the most are the eponymous ‘The Thing Around Your Neck’ and ‘The Shivering’. The former made me question myself, my own actions and reality – not too many stories do that. The latter is an unexpected combination of half-told contemplations that give food for thought rather than clearly outlined answers. Another story that I want to mention is ‘The Headstrong Historian’. It feels like she is channeling Chinua Achebe while keeping a strong voice of her own.


Other stories are also very interesting and span a number of subjects. This breadth of scope is what I think I love the most about this rather short book. Even though you don’t have a chance to stay too long with her characters, each one stays in your heart. If you haven’t read this book yet, I definitely recommend it!


Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Renunciation

One. Three. Five… She was carefully placing her feet. Eleven… Fifteen. Seventeen… So as not to step on the lines that were crisscrossing the tiled kitchen floor. Nineteen. This is where it stops.

She was alone in the house, but almost as much effort went into disguising her movements as when other people were around. She couldn’t rationalize this for everybody else the same way she did it for herself. They wouldn’t understand. They didn’t know. It was a dance with the universe, a risky salsa, in which one false move would inevitably lead to something terrible. She knew not what it was, but the certainty of it happening was more prevailing and overwhelming than anything else around or within her.

Nineteen. Good enough. She pulled out a chair and gingerly sat on its calming wooden surface. The sinuous lines running through it, the unpredictable fibers of which it was made appeared random, and that invariably invoked a kind of serenity in her.

She won’t have to do it anymore, today is a special day, and only because of that – one, two, three seconds… enough. She glanced at her hands. Steady. Beautiful long fingers, and an array of small iridescent beads shining against the brown of her skin, giving her palms that familiar slippery feeling.

She took a breath and picked up a folded piece of paper from the table. It was pleasantly dry, with a faded yellow tint, and smelled of the past. Her sister had found it two days ago, when moving some old furniture.

She thought about this one clue she had in her hands. How many pages like this would it take to redeem the twenty-seven years that slipped through her fingers no matter how tightly she clutched her fists? Three years wasn’t enough. Nineteen? Not even twenty-seven.




She’d heard a lot in these three years after the car accident. She had been introduced to herself, the kind of person she used to be but that often still felt like a stranger to her. She had to learn who her family was, who she could trust, who she loved and who cared about her. And while she felt that three years was enough to almost fully reconnect with others, she couldn’t say that about reconnecting with herself. It was interesting to listen to the stories about a curious little girl, then a feisty teenager, then a successful woman. But it never felt like these stories were about her, they were about someone else, a different person with a different life that everyone was trying so hard to impress upon her.

Other people have flashbacks. It may take a while, but they begin to remember something, at least one or two images come to them in their sleep. She, however, was blank.

Her two sisters made it their goal to alleviate her situation as well as they could. During the first year after the accident, soon after she recovered, they would rush her to the therapy sessions every Tuesday and Friday after work. It didn’t amount to much. What the therapist soon discovered to her surprise was that she had OCD. She didn’t even have to say much about the alarming premonitions that washed over her with militant regularity. The doctor was a professional in his field and seemed to see through her. Yet what he didn’t see was that none of his methods really helped.

Soon she stopped cooperating, and decided not to take any medication since she believed that it was only through her sheer willpower that she could truly defeat it. It took her another several months to convince both her sisters and the doctor that he had done all he could and that she could stop attending the sessions. Her sisters never learned she had OCD and chalked up her unusual behavior to her being amnesiac, a state they didn’t clearly understand.

Then her sisters became adamant about making her go to church every Sunday (for some reason she was averse to the idea for most of the first year which only made her sisters pray harder). They kept telling her how much she loved the Lord and gospel music when she was a child and how she got saved at the age of twelve. She wasn’t sure any of that was about her, but eventually she resigned and decided to go to church.

She remembered the first time she entered the church. As she walked through the door into a hall with a small stage, a pulpit and a cross hung on the wall behind it, the first thing she thought about was where she had to sit. They came early and there were quite a few seats available. Three from the right, six from the left; second row, fifth row… Then she decided that the best seat would be number seven if you start counting from the right side in the eights row.

After the collections had been made, and the pastor gave a sermon, something about the meaning of the Beatitudes, the choir got on the stage, and everybody stood up and started clapping. People clapped until their palms were sore and didn’t stop even after that. When the music faded away and it was time to pray some started speaking in tongues, others got on their knees. She wasn’t sure she felt the same way as most other people in the church. But it felt comforting. There was something in the air, something that she and everybody else shared. She could almost start crying, but didn’t. She also thought that maybe it was the same force that made them all do what they were doing that also kept her alert during the day to all the patterns and signs, the obvious omens of what could happen that only she could understand.

She would pray a lot since that day. Several times a day. Sometimes several times an hour. She would count the steps of the porch, skipping the odd ones on even days, and the even ones on odd days. She was wary not to let others see her patterns or let them decipher her numbers. She prayed that she would succeed in it, and she prayed to be delivered from this burden. The time went by, and she prayed. And she never missed church.



Life was beginning to look up for her family. Her eldest sister got a new job, and with more money coming in they decided to renovate the house. By now they had already removed almost every piece of old furniture they had. After much deliberation they had made a decision not to keep the wardrobe that belonged to their mother when she was alive. When it had been removed her sister found a folded piece of paper on the floor where the wardrobe used to stand. The next day she gave it to her with a wistful smile, and said that the message was addressed to her.

She was not sure what this relic could mean, obviously coming from the distant past that she knew so little about. She had been putting it off, the moment when she would read it, but now the anticipation overpowered her. She was holding it in her hands. She put it down and picked it up again.

The clock on the wall behind her was methodically ticking away. She threw a cautious glance at it. 2:55 PM. The second hand was gliding across the white background of the clock face, always moving forward and never looking back. Her mind impulsively concocted another goal: she had to finish reading before it strikes 3 PM, or…

After carefully unfolding it and inhaling the little pieces of dust that were an inevitable companion to the message, she saw large wavering handwriting. The rim of the page was decorated with a think curvy band of washed-out blue color. And from the upper-hand corner, like a dim light that someone had forgotten to turn off, shone the happy old sun. She smiled. She fidgeted in the chair a little and began to read.


Dear future Kayla,

How are you? What are you doing now? I don’t wont to forget congradulations on finishing high school! You’re very old now maybe 18 or even 20. Maybe you even forget things alredy like grandma. I can remind you I’ll tell you what I like. I hope you still love dogs. Because I LOVE them! Yesterday me and my mama saw a big dog in the street, I wonted to pet it and mama chased it away. I wish we take it home but mama says it’s filthy. I don’t think so. Mama buyed a desk for me for school I like it. I keep all my drawings on it and Mimi and Mini. I am their boss but we are also friends. You still wotch reading rainbow? You’re big now. Jasmine is big alredy too and she stoped wotching it. She says adults don’t wotch reading rainbow. But you’re not like that. I think you still wotch it right?
I gota go have dinner now. Bye! Good luck!

I forgot to ask what songs you like now? You can’t rite me back of corse if you don’t have a time mashin but you can just say. I love love will be rite here, have no fear. Mama says only good songs are songs we sing for the Lord. I’m sure you love Jesus. He died for us mama says becos he really loved us you know. I think you’re a doctor or a teacher I’m not sure which because right now I want to be both. Maybe you are both. I need to ask but don’t tell mom. Are you married to Bobby from third grade? I think I like him but we don’t talk. He thinks he’s too old like an adult. But I don’t think so. I hope you are happy and pretty with braids! I drawed the sun here for you so you smile when you see it!

With love Kayla


Kayla may not have become a doctor or a teacher, or both. At least not yet. And she didn’t remember what ‘Reading Rainbow’ was all about. And of course she wasn’t married to Bobby. But there was one thing that Kayla was confident about like she had never been before in her life. This letter, written in big shaky childish letters, was about her. Every word of this story meant much more to her than a lifetime of other people telling her who she used to be. For the first time she felt that she knew herself.

She glanced at her hands. Steady. Beautiful long fingers, and the gentle shining lines of the drying tears against the brown of her skin. She put down the letter and stepped on the floor. Her foot landed right on the line that had separated one tile from another as an insurmountable gulf of anguish. She had a look at the clock. 3:05 PM. She smiled and walked on. Saved. Kyla thought about it a little – she didn’t need to go to church anymore. That was all it took to stop dancing with the universe.

Thursday, October 22, 2015

The Autobiography of Malcolm X

After searching for this book for almost three years (some books are pretty hard to come by in Moscow) I finally bought and read ‘The Autobiography of Malcolm X’. All I can say is that it’s a must read for everybody.

Few people in history have made such a meaningful contribution to the fight for freedom and dignity as Malcolm X did. He stirred the country and the world into thought and action, he challenged the complacency and the dominant perceptions of the time, he opened the eyes of millions of people, black and white, and made them question, made them see things in a different light.

As hard as it is to see through his public image, this book gives a reader an insight into Malcolm X’s personal world, his honest and kind character. The life of a man who was on a constant quest for truth is full of important lessons that we should all learn. And if we do maybe our clearer understanding of history and of the present moment will finally enable us to set out on a course towards a brighter future.


Thursday, October 15, 2015

My photo impersonations

You may find it unusual but every once in a while I like to get dressed up as someone famous (usually someone I admire), and here's what comes out of it!

Steve Jobs


Iron Man



Clint Eastwood


Wolverine


The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air


Albert Einstein


Spock


Michael Jackson


My entertainment videos

I like to do some silly stuff which I'm not embarrassed to share with the public. Enjoy!

Liam Neeson Impression (I Don't Know Who You Are)

An important message that almost went viral on Facebook.



The Oncely Show – parody/tribute to The Daily Show with Jon Stewart

I really love The Daily Show and Jon Stewart, so I couldn't help but record something like this.



7/11 (Remake/Parody)

Ok, you probably won't be able to take me seriously after this one. But I'm still a serious man.



Gangnam Style

This is how I used to do my morning exercises.


Epic Run

Isn't it epic though?


Be careful what you wish for, punk. (Bruce Almighty)

Have you seen Bruce Almighty? Then you'll get the joke.

My music videos (covers)

I present to you a few of my covers.

Canción del Mariachi Morena de Mi Corazón


Blackbird


Johnny B. Goode


Every Night


Miss Alissa


Across The Universe

My music

iMak7tune is the name of my channel on SoundCloud, here is the link https://soundcloud.com/ivan-makeyenko

I write all kinds of songs, from something that is strongly influenced by The Beatles or Red Hot Chili Peppers to reggae and rap, as well as nerdy songs about random subjects, such as neutrinos traveling faster than the speed of light, gargling your throat when it's sore, and many other subject.

Below I will include a few links to the songs I like best.

Universe

I think this is the most beautiful song I've written so far. This is an acoustic version, just me, my guitar and the beautiful feelings that make everything click. I still haven't recorded another version of the song, the way it should be, which is a little Maroon 5ish, but I like this version too.




Lallaboolawoah

This is the best quality recording I've ever done. Most of the credit for this goes to my good old friend Anton Kulagin. We used to have a band together. He's super multitalented and in addition to doing the amazing sound engineering job he played the guitar, the bass and the drums (I guess that's pretty much everything except for vocals, but he did the 'whoo' part in the beginning). And now it's time it's time to let you in on a little secret. How do you like the name? It's called this because during one of the first takes I fumbled at first line of the song 'Lying in a bed...' and sang something like 'Lallaboolawoah'.



I Will Find A Reason

This one is beautiful too. And it's the most complicated song I ever recorded on my iPad.



Math

Well I just love math. This song was written during my year at the Faculty of Mechanics and Mathematics at Lomonosov Moscow State University. Recorded on my iPad.



Smile (reggae)

I wrote this one when I was 9 or so, but it took about 12 years to record it. It's a very raw version, just playing live. It sound very rough in a several parts, but I hope it can make you feel the Jamaican vibes!



Versos

My attempt at rapping. It's just my voice, no beat. I really like the lyrics, but I certainly gotta work on my delivery.

The 50th Post!

Today is an important milestone for my blog – the 50th post. I started it as a 'training field' where I can 'befriend words and syllables and to become closer to the beautiful world of writing', as I wrote in one of the first posts.

A lot of things have changed since then. I started reading more, and as a consequence writing has become an integral part of my life. I'm not the one to decide whether or not I have gotten any good at it, but one thing I know is that there's still a long way to go and a lot I can learn. That's why I'm all the more excited about having this blog.

I never made a serious effort to promote it up to this point, only telling a few friends about it. But I think it's time to bring it to the new level. As a way to celebrate this important stage I have decided to dedicate the next few posts to some of the other things I enjoy doing apart from writing. And so I'm going to introduce you to the diverse content that I have accumulated throughout the past few years.

Most of the posts on this blog so far have been book reviews, poems, essays and articles about the things that I find important. With the addition of these new posts I hope you will enjoy learning a little more about the other big parts of my life, namely music, entertainment videos and photo impersonations.

And since I'm trying to promote my blog now, feel free to share with your friends. I will also appreciate you honest feedback!

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Racism at UCLA: Article 2

Racism at UCLA – this is an honest and straightforward title I’m going to give to a series of articles I’ll have to write during my stay at UCLA. The circumstances force me to react, and I know by now that one article won’t be enough. A blackface party that took place a few days ago is only a shadow of a much bigger animal.

In my last post on this subject I called out the bland and manipulative titles of most articles covering the blackface party at UCLA. The very narratives too were sugarcoated (and in this country people only take white sugar). Today I want to talk about another article, this time hitting home, our home – The Daily Bruin, to which I dedicate this post.

Earlier today I read a submission by a confused freshman who demonstrated a classic example of getting a lot of things wrong at the same time. See, there’s no big problem when one person gets it all wrong, not even when a small fraction of the population does. Those who sincerely believe that having a certain percentage of individuals of every kind is called diversity may even rejoice at having a bunch of ignorant people around. But when a lot of folks get it all wrong – it’s a national tragedy. And I think we’re witnessing one today.

I have no intention of personally attacking the author of this article, she is but a product of our society. And again I’m not saying this in a condescending tone, I too get things wrong, I too get confused. The important thing is for us to tell each other when we stray too far from the truth, and when our attempts at having an objective approach fail due to certain distorting factors. At the same time, I feel rather comfortable with attacking institutions and organizations – you guys have more responsibility and therefore should know better.

There are many problems with modern journalism, but the major one is the utter confusion as to what constitutes unbiased reporting of facts and what is merely an opinion. All sorts of opinions exist – this is an objective fact. Not every opinion deserves to be heard from a certain platform – is my humble proposition. When a news agency (such as The Daily Bruin) gives an opportunity to somebody to provide their opinion, they should probably consider one important aspect: is that person an expert in this field, or, since I dislike the much-misused word ‘expert’, is that person qualified to provide a meaningful opinion that deserves to be heard?

The opinion (and I’m glad that it was at least labeled as such) that was formulated in this article is a rather well-put together amalgam of ideas that are widely circulated within many non-black circles in the U. S. And quite naturally it was synthesized by a non-black person. Oh, and one important component of this mixture was a statement of how Black Bruins SHOULD feel about this or that situation, particularly that ‘mildly inappropriate’ party.

Now it’s time for a simple metaphor. If you want to know what it feels like to run a marathon, who would you want to ask?
  1. a mathematician
  2. a ballet dancer
  3. a physician
  4. a marathon runner
Did you feel that ‘ding ding ding’ in your head when you stumbled upon the last option? That’s right, a mathematician may be able to describe the process of running in a series of equations, a ballet dancer, just like a marathon runner, knows a great deal about the physical strain associated with their craft, and a physician knows a lot about what happens to your body when you run, but the only person who can tell you what it FEELS like to run a marathon is somebody who’s tried doing that before. And now let’s extrapolate. If you want to understand what it feels like to be a Black Bruin, why events like this are not-so-mildly inappropriate, and why it hurts so much when they happen yet again – ask a Black Bruin! As easy as that, this in all probability would be the person who’s best qualified for the job!

What makes it even better, most Black Bruins still don’t have this convenient ability not to see patterns like, say, their white counterparts do. To many of us white people a blackface party is a singular event, it comes and it goes. To a Black Bruin it’s yet ANOTHER sick fun-a-palooza in a succession of similar parties that every so often sweep through college campuses like a vicious tornado. Or the police shootings of unarmed black people that to the white people who live in this beautiful world where ALL lives matter are again but a handful of singular occurrences that undoubtedly have nothing to do with each other. Well, a black person sees a pattern in there, maybe because they just don’t want to be the next singular case.

Anyway we as a society have mastered this ability not to see patterns and hurl the historical context as far away from our fragile egos as we can. Now if we want to ‘move on and get over things’, the time has come to unlearn this precious skill. But here’s an idea as to where to start – before you form your own opinion and approach, respectfully ask the nearest black person on campus if maybe they could infuse you with a little bit of the much needed objective first-hand knowledge of the subject.

This article is getting really long, but certainly not longer than the history of blackface parties in the U. S. colleges. We still need to discuss a few things. I actually specialize in statistics. And one thing I learned about it during my years in college is that this powerful and finely-tuned tool can prove to be a heavy unwieldy (and obviously threatening) ax in the wrong hands. The author of this article cites the figures reflecting black on black crime and other things that black people do, and I’m even pretty sure the figures are correct (although I haven’t tried to confirm this, it’s not the point anyway). The point is that there are two distinct concepts that we human beings so often misinterpret and confuse (writing this article now I can’t help but think just how we are a very confused species in general) – causality and correlation.

The former deals with the questions of how one thing (cause) brings about the other thing (effect) as its consequence. The latter, however, merely reflects the relationship between two things that consists in how the dynamics of one indicator is similar (or dissimilar) to the dynamics of another indicator. For example, a super strong correlation was observed between suicides by hanging, strangulation and suffocation and U. S. spending on science, space and technology (I really hope you won’t blame the U. S. for spending so much on science just because of that). For a more accurate explanation of these two concepts please consult any good text book on statistics.

Statistics despite its sophisticated methods is not able to answer pretty much a single question about causality. There’s a strong temptation, however, to substitute correlation for causality. And I believe the author of this article (along with many a politician) indulges this temptation without any hesitation. There are indeed many socio-economic problems within the black community (not saying that the white community is not ridden with problems, maybe of a different kind, either). The way many people interpret that, if expressed in a frank straightforward way, is that there’s something inherently wrong with black people (you name it) and therefore we see all these problems.

Now if you still remember the idea of identifying patterns and placing things within a historical context, maybe you’ll arrive at the conclusion that the high crime rates and many other indicators are not the cause of all the troubles in the black community, and not even the effect of that imaginary inherent quality that somehow makes all black people bad, but rather the effect of something that the white community will only be able to identify once immersed into deep and sober introspection. Speaking only about the economic side of things (not even trying to bring up the subject of historically stripping black people of every possible unalienable right and dehumanizing them in every way imaginable), designing the institutions in such a way that a certain group of people is constantly propelled toward poverty and doesn’t have a privilege of accumulating wealth (this list can go on and on: denying access to workplaces, education etc. etc.) is a foolproof method to create all kinds of problems within that group. And this isn’t the matter of ‘back in the day’ and ‘in the 18th century’, we’re still doing it now folks!

However, there’s a much more important distorting factor to those figures cited in the article. There’s quite a significant disparity in how crime is defined for white people and people of color. Black people have been arrested disproportionately and oftentimes for something that a white person can more or less easily get away with. No surprise then that the crime rates among black people may be higher!

Incidentally, it’s important to mention that focusing on crime rates and black on black crime simply has nothing to do with the subject under discussion in the article. There is a particular incident, and the Afrikan Student Union is doing their best to address it. Why the author expects the ASU to deal with black on black crime while not urging all of the predominantly white organizations on campus to address white on white crime or school shootings carried out by white men – this is a mystery!

And the last point I have to make is that this article is, well, one fallacy on top of another. Ad hominem, tu quoque, loaded question, appeal to authority, balck-or-white (what a coincidence!), false cause (explained in detail above), personal incredulity, genetic fallacy, cherry-picking, appeal to emotion, and, most importantly, irrelevant conclusion. Take your time to Google all these and you’ll find great examples for each one in the article.

Before I wrap it up, I want to express respect and gratitude to the members of Afrikan Student Union (Janay Williams and everybody who worked hard to make black voices heard) and all the Black Bruins at UCLA. You guys have handled the situation the best way you could. And yet as we all can see with every such article, many of these efforts seem to go in vain. And I am firmly confident that I know why. White people get defensive. All the time. (ALL lives matter. We too are the targets of racism. And so on, and so on… Now try and explain that ‘reverse racism’ is not even a thing).

As I wrote in my previous article, that observation I made a few days ago: however sad it is, whatever fact, argument or opinion is put forth by a black person, it has less value to our society – it appears to be dubious, unconfirmed and less likely to be true (as in ‘Oh, several black students saw them in blackface? Where are the pictures though?’). A white person’s claim almost invariably is taken more seriously. Being white, with this undeserved privilege lavishly bestowed on me, I feel that it’s my responsibility to leverage my position and provide these arguments that I hope will find their reader. And since our society is so full of trust for the white man’s words, I hope mine will be listened to with the same depth of belief in their accuracy and honesty as any other white man’s. Just trust me, as you always do, I’m telling the truth.

And if you’re still full of attention to what I’m saying, I would like to direct you to a much more knowledgeable source of information on this topic (believe me) – the Black Bruins, try hearing them out, and maybe (just a suggestion) you might want to ask some of THEM to write an article about the topic.


Feel free to share and spread the message!

#BlackBruinsMatter

Monday, October 12, 2015

International Day of the Girl Child

Today is International Day of the Girl Child. This day may not have a long history to it, but treating girls the way our society does and priming girls for certain things while making them believe they are unfit for or incapable of other things has definitely been around for millennia.

It all starts in the childhood – no access to education for the estimated 62 million girls, child marriage, abuse of all kinds, but most importantly the ‘traditional’ upbringing that instills in the young minds of both girls and boys an unsettling idea that girls are somehow inferior and therefore subordinate to men, that there are things that are rightfully out of their reach, that they’re not supposed to dream about and that they shouldn’t aspire to.

As it is with any global long-standing problem, this may not be easy to change with a single effort – such problems are rooted too deeply in the very foundation of our society. But there is a lot one can do as an individual. Stop teaching girls to underestimate themselves, stop supporting those people and those institutions that do this, spend some quality time looking inwards – learn how your customary beliefs may frustrate the progress that girls make in our society. Stop being a part of the problem yourself (the vast majority of us are guilty). Make sure the future leaders, inventors, entrepreneurs, scientists, mothers, sisters and daughters inherit the world where they will realize their full potential and will be able to live the productive lives we all deserve to have. Be the change!


Black Lives Matter: Artists and Intellectuals Creating a Movement

Today it was an absolute privilege to attend a conversation with a Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison entitled ‘Black Lives Matter: Artists and Intellectuals Creating a Movement’. She was not able to be there in person but joined us via video conferencing to accept the UCLA Medal and for a panel discussion. This was a poignant and meaningful conversation. It was great to learn a little more about the grassroots origins of the Black Lives Matter movement from one of its original organizers in LA (many people think of it as just a hashtag but it’s so so so much more) and about the work of local activists, to hear the opinions of distinguished professors on the current situation in the historical context, and of course to partake of the wisdom that Toni Morrison shared with the audience.


[Originally posted on Facebook on October 5, 2015]

Friday, October 9, 2015

Hot Peace

This poem imagines the feelings of an abstract inventor of the atomic bomb (not necessarily the actual person) witnessing its first test. This poem does’t pretend to be historically accurate, nor, in fact, does it have to be about the atomic bomb per se, it is rather about the responsibility that comes with unleashing tremendous power in whatever form. 

Hot Peace

The agony of the swelling earth.
The instant rupture of living skies.
The curse pronounced upon the land.
The fearless fright in the eye of a man.

The orange sun sired in the soil.
The restless hump of the heavy haze.
The viscous drag of the dying dust.
The disbelieving act of trust.

– I merely desired to comprehend,
I never professed I would take the reins.
– The price of knowledge is often steep,
Taste not the spring, or else drink deep.

The sizzling ashes gravitate up.
The open gashes try to speak.
We took a step, we chose a way –
Welcome to the bright new day!

Racism at UCLA: Article 1

Just want to share an observation, nothing new in it, yet I want to leverage the position I have now, being a Bruin, being at UCLA where good things happen and shit happens too.
The blackface party that took place two days ago has now been more or less covered by the media after the concerted efforts of Black Bruins. But pay attention to the rhetoric in the titles of these articles and elsewhere.
Students upset …’ – sounds like it’s their problem. Why not instead focus on the perpetrator and not the ‘upset’ students? Here’s another take – ‘Fraternity and sorority accused …’, ‘UCLA fraternity, sorority criticized …’ or ‘UCLA fraternity, sorority under fire …’ – doesn’t it sound like there’s a lot of (potentially unfair) criticism here?
Why not lay out the facts – 'UCLA fraternity and sorority used blackface at a party' or 'UCLA fraternity and sorority are racist'? Some articles I found later today are kind of more straightforward about the situation but they’re not in the majority.
Another point is, before the media got their hands on the photos, there was a lot of ‘uncertainty’ as to whether it was true or not. I understand the need to confirm allegations with facts, yet it only works one-way. I don’t remember a situation where a white person’s statement wasn’t enough to kick-start some kind of a legal investigation, not to mention get an article published. When several black students reported what they saw first-hand – that of course is dubious, where are the pictures?
It’s not about UCLA. Just think about it, it’s a relatively small community, compared to a city, a state or the country. If such things happen here, and are portrayed this way, how come so many people don’t see that much more profound distortions happen on a bigger scale? The black community has been pointing out the difference in how the media reports on whatever it is that has to do with people of color from how it deals with their white counterparts, and not surprisingly according to this same logic these claims come across as dubious and unconfirmed (at best). Just open your eyes a little wider and look around!
I’m writing all this not because I expect too many people to change their minds, but because I want to leverage the privilege that this society has so generously vested in me – I’m white, apparently my words will sound more credible to many of you, so then behold: I’m here at UCLA, witnessing first-hand how one particular event (which by the way is one in a long line of similar ones) is being covered, and I’m telling you, it speaks volumes about the situation on campus and in the country. You will take me at my word now, won’t you?
‪#‎BlackBruinsMatter‬

Monday, October 5, 2015

Between the World and Me

Usually after reading a book I feel compelled to write what many people would call a review. This time, however, I know such a commentary would be meaningless and redundant. All I can say, it's an honest and very important book, I needed to read it, and most likely so do you. Find it, read it.



Sunday, September 27, 2015

Lessons from Roxane Gay

I've only been at UCLA a few days and I've already had an opportunity to attend a number of incredibly enriching and inspiring events. One of the best ones so far was a discussion hosted by Roxane Gay, the author of 'Bad Feminist'. This article on The Daily Bruin nicely encapsulates the key ideas that she raised, and guess what – yours truly was interviewed for the paper!
What's more important though is that there's a couple of things I learned during that short yet exciting talk that I would like to share with you all. I would often find myself trying to be an ally, but I guess Gay's position on this is much more reasonable: it's better to do away with the concept of allies altogether! Our society is laden with many long-standing problems, and it's incumbent upon all of us to deal with them and solve them. By calling ourselves allies we often distance ourselves from the shared responsibility as if we're somehow disconnected from the reality that people who are disenfranchised in one way or another live in. Another important point is that a lot of times, even within the feminist movement, those people who do not hold a position of privilege feel the necessity to somehow change and reinvent themselves to at least partly redeem the power that is rightfully theirs. And even if that change leads to what would be considered success, that too is unjust – the problem is not with the people on the receiving side of oppression, it's the ones who exercise their privilege and directly or indirectly support the oppressing side who really have to change.