How your white Privilege can help create a better world
??Gloria Tabi
TEDx Speaker | Founder | Author of Inclusive Teams & Workplaces | Organisational Justice Specialist | Head of DEI & Anti-racism | Nelson Mandela UBUNTU Social Justice Award 2022 | No-Fluff Inclusion Newsletter
In its literal sense, White privilege is the unearned advantages and entitlements afforded to a dominant group, so for example in Australia, this is White people of European decent.
A sociologist scholar, Peggy McIntosh’s?“Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack”? identifies the daily effects of privileges that she has as a White woman.
To have White privilege does not make you a racist. You have these privileges because you’re simply born White.
Societal systems, laws, policies created to govern a country like Australia, are often enacted by the dominant group, whites Europeans, therefore, can skewed towards benefiting that group more than anyone else.
There has been a lot written about what it is that the underprivilege groups are missing, and needing support for, but there is little understanding of what white Privilege is.
The hierarchical division that determines where we are located in society, the illusional line that places some people above and some below has the power to change the course of one’s life.
What about Class privilege?
Whether you feel that you have power, status material worth or the ability to attend an exclusive private school or not, as a White person, you’ll still have White privilege, just by being White.
Class privilege, although an important topic for another time, is often what people think of when discussing White privilege. Class privilege often acquired through heritance, is the way in which society is structured and classified according to material worth and power.
Class privilege is not the same as White privilege because all White people have White privileges, but they may not necessarily have Class privilege.?
In the 1930s and beyond, many Black scholars spoke of white Privilege and the underlying concepts in the way systems placed Black people and non-whites on the back foot and at the same time, enabling whites to move ahead.
Scholars such as W.E.B. Du Bois, Angela Davies, Toni Morrison and Patricia Hill-Collins, just to name a few wrote extensively on the topic of white Privilege. A notable piece of writing by Du Bois, “The Souls of White Folks” details the state of white Privileges at work in America. But it took Peggy McIntosh (a white scholar) in the 1980s to make the use of white Privilege to gain popularity in social discourse.
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?See White privileges for what it is
We are taught that racism is about individual acts of meanness towards Blacks and non-whites. This definition is true, as well as the structures and systems created to govern our societies to dominate others to keep them on the side of disadvantage.
White privileges manifest in many ways, here are some examples of the (“Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack” ) by Peggy McIntosh: –
The opposite of privilege is disadvantage and although not all White people are born with the “silver spoon” in their mouth, most won’t have to negotiate the world with the daily racial slurs on the street, being racially profiled by police or being followed at a shopping centre.
Your White privilege can support anti-racism
To really understand your White privilege, is liberating.
But even more powerful as you decide to use the privilege in service of others can be transformational for you and our world.
When White privilege is used for anti-racism, it counters the systems that perpetuate harm to non-White and everyone else.
Although as a White person you may think that you didn’t ask for the privilege and so you can’t be blame for it, but you can decide to put it to use by being compassionate in your actions, not as a saviourism, but to help create a fairer world.
This article first published on Open Forum on Gloria Tabi | March 13, 2021
Gloria Tabi is a Master of Research Student specialising in Social Analysis on Race, Racism, and Anti-Racism within Humanities, Communications and Arts at Western Sydney University. Gloria is an Author of Inclusive Teams & Workplaces: Everyone Wins!! She is the Director and Founder of EVERYDAY INCLUSION. As a Black African-Australian woman, Gloria brings well-grounded knowledge and experience of the impacts presented in race and workplace exclusions.
Community Engagement | Transitional Justice & Peacebuilding | Research & Evaluation | PhD??
2 年Thanks so much for this, Gloria. I am often worried about how I may be renacting my privilege, especially white saviourism, in my aspirations and actions for anti-racism and decolonisation. Thanks for this clear reminder that this is not always the case. I appreciate your generosity in writing this article.
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2 年I forgive you for blaming me.
Nurturing Growth Founder and Depth Coach. Team Coach. Enneagram Assessor and Coach. Retreat Leader
2 年When we acknowledge our rank, power and privilege, then we can use it well to empower ourselves and others. The opposite is also true. When we disown our rank, power and privilege, we cause more harm than good. #DE&I
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2 年A very engaging read. Thanks.