It’s Going To Take More Than Empathy To Eradicate Racism
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It’s Going To Take More Than Empathy To Eradicate Racism

The racial uprisings of 2020 forced a global conversation about racism, and more specifically anti-blackness, and the insidious ways that it has shape-shifted over time. In many of these conversations, the suggested solution to the racial injustice that plagues society has been a need for greater empathy. Empathy is?defined ?as “the action of understanding, being aware of, being sensitive to, and vicariously experiencing the feelings, thoughts, and experience of another of either the past or present without having the feelings, thoughts, and experience fully communicated in an objectively explicit manner.”?Previous examinations ?of empathy have suggested that it plays a key role in fostering diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in the workplace, but in his?book ?Against Empathy, Yale psychologist Paul Bloom makes a compelling case for why our fixation on empathy may be misguided. In the book, Bloom outlines why empathy should?not?be our north star and how it can actually lead to negative outcomes. Empathy is one of the most commonly cited remedies to prejudice. The?argument ?is that if more people were able to “put themselves in the shoes of others”, then we could eliminate racism. There is?article ?after?article ?that supports this notion. But despite society’s fixation on empathy, it is important to examine why we must move away from making empathy-building the raison d'être of our DEI efforts.?

In?Against Empathy, Bloom asserts that too much empathy can actually be detrimental to an individual. A highly empathetic person, also known as an?empath , is “highly attuned to the feelings and emotions of those around them,” and they have the ability to “actually taking those feelings on; feeling what another person is feeling at a deep emotional level.”?Against Empathy?purports that those who are highly empathetic may actually be impaired by their empathy and may not be able to effectively help those who are directly suffering. A manager, for example, who is highly empathetic, may not be able to effectively counsel employees impacted by trauma and may not be able to effectively lead because they are too impacted by the experiences of their employees. This can lead to?secondary trauma , otherwise known as compassion fatigue. A person experiencing secondary trauma may not be able to adequately support and advocate for a distressed individual. If employees on your team are sharing their experiences with racial trauma and your first instinct is to put yourself in their shoes, for a highly empathetic person especially, the temporary suffering that is experienced secondhand can cloud your judgement and limit your understanding of how to effectively support the person who is experiencing the racial harm and trauma firsthand. It is critical to understand that one can be motivated to help others and advocate for them?without?feeling empathy for them.

Another argument against empathy is the fact that our ability to empathize with another is shaped by our own unique experiences and our understanding of the person we are empathizing with. There is a wealth of research that indicates that we actually feel less empathy for Black people compared to white people. One?study ?found that “the extent to which Caucasian observers share the pain experience of other people is affected by the race of the person in pain.” What this essentially means is that all empathy is not created equal. We feel more empathy for certain groups of people and according to Bloom, we cannot empathize with more than one or two people at the same time; empathy appears to be finite. Empathy also, Bloom argues, has a narrow focus, which can cause us to put our attention on a select target, sometimes to the detriment of others. It makes sense then to reason that if empathy is the objective, then it will be challenging for an individual to understand and be sensitive to the pain of multiple marginalized groups simultaneously.

Three women of different ethnicities smiling for a photo.

Another question that we must consider is this: what do we do if we are not able to understand the unique experiences of another? What if we?can’t?put ourselves in the shoes of another??New York Times?best-selling author Ijeoma Oluo explored this in a?video ?that was posted to her Instagram page. In the video Oluo states “we have to get past this idea that everything must feel like something that?you’ve?experienced in order for it to be valid…that you must run every other race’s lived experience through whiteness in order to support it, or to understand it…it is really important to back away from this desire to have everything relate to you. Because if you think that it has to make sense to you…then whenever justice hits an area of lived experience that?you?can’t relate to, you’re going to discount it.” One of the important points that Oluo was making in her video was that you should be able to support an individual who has experienced trauma without running it through your own filter of lived experience. This presents a problem, however, because the empathy principle is based on the premise of understanding and experiencing what another is feeling, and in doing that we juxtapose their experiences through the filter of our own lived experiences. But you can be compassionate and concerned about another person without necessarily feeling what they are feeling. Empathy is not needed for you to support marginalized people. White people will not always be able to understand and empathize with the experiences of the racially oppressed, but that does not mean they cannot advocate for and support these marginalized individuals.

Empathy ?requires one to live vicariously through another, experiencing the feelings, thoughts and attitudes that they are also feeling. Our empathy obsession needs to be studied and scrutinized more. One of the main arguments against empathy is that you can understand that someone is in pain without actually experiencing that pain yourself. The race of a person and our individual evaluation of that person can shape our feelings and influence the amount of empathy we feel for them. Whether we feel empathy for another person can greatly depend on a number of different variables. Regardless of race, socioeconomic status, gender or any other individual characteristics, people deserve humanity and compassion. The problem is that we filter our feelings through our own personal experiences—if we don’t understand an experience or cannot put ourselves in the moccasins of another, our ability to truly grasp their feelings is limited. Relying on empathy to eradicate racism may be a futile effort. There is mounting evidence that suggests that empathy should not be the modus operandi of our DEI efforts. Instead of empathy, Bloom suggests that compassion and kindness are better replacements. Within organizations, rather than trying to feel what the other person is feeling, we should be focused on how to mitigate and repair the harm inflicted on the most marginalized employees.

Author's note: Against Empathy author Paul Bloom was not suggesting that compassion and kindness would eradicate racism, but rather making a recommendation for what we should be focusing on instead of empathy.

This article was originally published in Forbes .

About The Pink Elephant newsletter:

The Pink Elephant newsletter is a weekly LinkedIn newsletter designed to stimulate critical and relevant dialogue that centers around topics of race and racial equity. The newsletter is curated by Janice Gassam Asare, Ph.D . who is a writer, speaker, consultant, educator, and self-proclaimed foodie. Janice is the host of the Dirty Diversity podcast, where she explores diversity, equity and inclusion in more detail. Dr. Janice’s work is centered around the dismantling of oppressive systems while amplifying the voices and needs of the most marginalized folks. If you are seeking guidance around diversity, equity, and inclusion in your workplace, visit her website to learn more about services that can be tailored to your specific needs. If you enjoyed this newsletter, please share with others you feel would gain value from it.

Photo credit: Photo by?Sarah Pflug ?from?Burst

Tamara “Tammy” S. W.

Unconventional Security Industry Leader??? | AML & Financial Crimes Expert?? | Passionate Speaker??? Featured in Black Enterprise, AFROTECH & SANS |Equity Engineer ??|Culture Curator??| Vegan ??

1 周

This was such a good read. Thank you for providing a different perspective. Lately, empathy has consumed my thoughts on how we move forward.

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Leon Pillay (he/him/his)

Associate Instructor/Getsmarter/2U: Founder: Project Lead: TTS: Inclusion Activist: (Specializing in DEI & Belonging) #GBV #DEI #womeninleadership #diversityequityinclusion #Disability #mentalhealth

3 年

No empathy no human being, next we will find reasons for no equanimity...and am sure the journey of "no’s" shall go on

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Lindsey Roth-Rosen

Special Projects Consultant @ Breaking Ground | Process improvements, innovative solutions

3 年

Empathy is a positive attribute, yet being empathic within the context of DEI can be seen as coming from a place of PRIVILEGE and or NOT an ORGANIC occurrence. Unfortunately, people seem to need a personal experience to understand the complexity of what another person experiences. Yet, someone with a broken arm automatically suggests a painful event without having to have experienced it. The DEI initiatives, tells you "to be empathic." This strategy reminds me of a mom telling a child before going to school, " Now, Charlie, be nice to the kids that don't look like you or are poor, run along son" where's growth or deeper understanding with that approach? It is more of a template that's applied to the "others." While mom means well, she doesn't get it, nor wants to get it; it's a farce. Through the lens of these theories, "being told to be empathic is a shallow attempt that may perpetuate exclusion. Maybe I'm overthinking this, some concepts need to be repeated enough times to become second nature; if race is a societal construct that people are taught to "see' then empathy is a bandaid, yet both are learned behaviors.DEI has "it isn't Christian to act a certain way" ring to it, religion is another applied template. IMO.

John Jasik

Judicial Liaison at United States Department of State

3 年

Janice, great piece - many thanks. I will be considered a DEIA heretic for sharing this in the State Department but it needs to be read widely.

Nadja El Fertasi

?? Trusted EQ Thought Leader | Resilience Coach for the Digital Era | Safety, Resilience & Well-Being as a Service | Prioritizing People with Emotional Firewalls | Let’s Connect ??

3 年

This is a compelling and thought provoking article I enjoyed reading. I also like to offer an additional point of view related to empathy and Empath, which for me are two distinct phenomena as explained by Dr Judith Orloff who has researched and worked with the topic of being an Empath for many years. Empathy as you point out is being sensitive to other people’s emotions and needs. An Empath has the ability to experience those emotions to different extents. You can display empathy without the need to absorb the emotions of someone else, without stepping in someone else’s shoes and without making their experience yours. A gréat book by Daniel Kahneman - Thinking, Fast and Slow - explains how the brain regulates our levels of empathy. I agree with the view that empathy alone is not the solution, and at the same time without empathy having constructive conversations and inclusive strategies maybe futile as it is the starting point to reduce blindness across many different DEI dimensions. Finally, as a woman of colour myself, as an Empath, and as someone who has experienced racism for many years - I have found that when I apply: seek to understand before being understood - people’s defense mechanisms lower and true validation occurs.

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