Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Gentle Hands: Moving Beyond Black and White
Bill Quigley
18 Jul 2007
🖨️ Print Article

Gentle Hands: Moving Beyond Black and White

by BAR contributing editor Richard O'Connor

"It took this worn out, down at the heels western
Massachusetts hill town to purge any traces of whiteness I imagined I still
laid claim to."
GentleHandsWithHands

She says I have gentle
hands. Lover's hands. I say polio hands. I thought it must have been my brain
that initially attracted her to me. And, the paintings, to be sure. I started
off our life together a simple Irish painter lad of the County Roscommon kind.
My eventual slide into blackness was of the rude awakening kind.

There were endless
discussions of politics, projection, Malcolm, Martin and the civil rights
movement. There was becoming officially, legally, a part of her family. There
was the big belly and then a daughter. There was a brown face and Afro hair
always in front of my eyes like a reflection in a mirror.

And, almost best of all,
there was that dinner party. In a sea of black faces, I was the one who
remembered it was Little Esther Phillips who recorded "What a Difference A Day
Makes" on CTI.  Such astonished looks on
their umber faces, and the subtle nods as if to say "Yeah. The brotha's
alright."

In our 24 years together,
we've experienced a dozen towns in five states, a half dozen Caribbean islands,
and European adventures. It took this worn out, down at the heels western
Massachusetts hill town to purge any traces of whiteness I imagined I still
laid claim to.

"The knock on the door. ‘I'm Officer Brooks. The lady
next door says you were walking around exposing yourself.'"

The goat farm, a long
awaited 3-acre fantasy realized, an achievement. Only 3 weeks in this hick
town, this scenic neighborhood, this awful ramshackle house. Three weeks? The
knock on the door. "I'm Officer Brooks. The lady next door says you were
walking around exposing yourself." Breathe in. Breathe out.

"This is Mrs. Behilo's son
the fireman."  He smirks. "She says you
were walking around exposing yourself." Time really does stand still, you know.
The whole world changed.

Officer Brooks stopped
talking. He just stared awhile. I could see the wheels turning around in his
head. He asks me  "Do you walk at
all?"  ‘Bout damn time he noticed this
bright yellow wheelchair.

"No. I don't walk."

Officer Brooks, half my age,
says "I have perfect vision and I can't see that far. What is it, about 600
feet?" God Bless you Officer Brooks! And, God Bless your sainted mother, and
your mother's mother, and her mother for seven generations back!

"Yup. About 600 feet."

"They say black don't rub off. They're wrong."

In the liberal college town
we had just moved from, a very well educated, respectable Black man, a
professor I think he was, told me with sadness and a hint of shame in his voice
about hearing the clicking of car doors being locked from the inside as he
walked past them along the public sidewalk.

From gentle hands, lover's
hands, husband hands, father hands, polio hands, painter hands.... to indecent
exposure predator hands just as sudden as the clicking of a car door lock.

They say black don't rub
off. They're wrong. White people are the devil. Did I say that? I'm just light
skinned - and way too black to be living here.

Richard O'Connor can be contacted at nonametribe@earthlink.net.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Kit Klarenburg
    Gilbert Bigio: Israel's Man in Haiti and the Architect Behind the US Migrant Crisis
    09 Oct 2024
    Billionaire oligarch Gilbert Bigio, is well know as one of the forces of influence that allow for shipments of arms to enter the country, provide cover for the western-backed gangs, and…
  • Max Ajl
    Dismantling Green Colonialism: Stages of a Just Transition?
    09 Oct 2024
    Dismantling Green Colonialism: Energy and Climate Justice in the Arab Region has received much critical acclaim since its publication with Pluto Press in October 2023. Here, while acknowledging…
  • Recognized Movement
    Open letter to President Abinader: We call for compliance with the Constitution and an end to denationalization and racial discrimination
    09 Oct 2024
    September marked eleven years since the Dominican Republic passed the law that revoked the citizenship of millions of Dominican people with Haitian heritage. The government still maintains that the…
  • Joel Mukisa
    The problem is systemic: understanding the #OccupyParliament movement in Kenya
    09 Oct 2024
    Reflecting on the mass protests that recently shook Kenyan society from top to bottom, Joel Mukisa argues that we must go much further than a choiceless democracy to find answers. A systematic…
  • Black Agenda Radio
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio October 4, 2024
    04 Oct 2024
    A Haitian politician's amusing moment at the United Nations obscures continued interference from the US and the UN. But first, we hear analysis of US and Israeli actions that have sparked the…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us