A couple of thousand people turned out in St. John’s on Saturday for a rally organized by a new group calling itself Black Lives Matter NL. They listened to speeches, raised their fists, and did all the things one would expect at a rally to draw attention to anti-black racism in Newfoundland and Labrador.
There is anti-black racism in
Newfoundland and Labrador, as much as people want to turn a blind eye to
it. Many of the people on the receiving end
of the racist behaviour came here when the economy was booming. The racism - petty, vicious, ugly - was there if you wanted to see
it. And now that the economy is not
booming, racists are expressing themselves more aggressively.
There was nothing particularly remarkable about the
weekend protest except that it took the murder of yet another black man by
police in the United States followed by two weeks of growing protests across
the United States to spark anyone locally to notice what is and has been a
problem here for some time.
There have been some brief flurries of public comment
about racism here recently, but what makes this weekend’s demo rather unusual is
that it took such overwhelming events in a completely different culture and
country over two full weeks to spark a bit of stirring locally.
Not an issue, say some most likely since it was all
for the good. Well yes, it is good to
see issues of race and racism raised in Newfoundland and Labrador. And were this the only example of a local
action spurred by international events, then we might well just ignore.
Except that it isn’t one, odd example.