I suppose it’s fair to say that, on
Saturday, January 18th, very
few households in America knew who Richard Sherman was or what he did
for a living; but, on Sunday, the next day, it took exactly 34 seconds for
Seahawk Cornerback Richard Sherman to become a household name (at least in
households with ESPN). Having tipped a touchdown pass out of the hands of 49ers
rival, Michael Crabtree in the final moments of the game that would determine
which team would advance to the Super Bowl, Sherman was asked by Fox Reporter
Erin Andrews one of those innocuous “game over” questions that poses for
breaking news in the NFL. Only Sherman
didn’t respond with one of those innocuous answers which distribute praise to
those on and off the field. Rather he did what any one of us would do when
overcome by the stress and pressure of high expectations, an undoubtedly
over-the-top endorphin rush and, I suppose, more than a little exhaustion - he
threw a tantrum. Only when any one of us
throws a tantrum, it’s highly unlikely that there will be a camera and a
microphone to record the scene for endless views on YouTube.
Within the NFL
Richard Sherman is viewed as, perhaps, the
up-and-coming young Cornerback. He is
also known as the NFL’s bad boy du jour
- or more precisely - as the League’s resident “trash talker.” He is, of
course, the most recent in a long line of trash talking NFL players. What makes this particular incident
noteworthy isn’t what Sherman
said in those 34 seconds but what was said (or more precisely, posted and/or tweeted)
about what he said…and it wasn’t pretty. Within a mere 24 hours, the Internet
was pulsating with anti-Sherman remarks; some so vile and degrading that it
felt as if the Nation had been transported back in time to the ante-bellum
South. One particularly troubling Tweet that was picked up by the news
aggregators asserted:
Someone needs to introduce Richard Sherman
to George Zimmerman.
From my perspective, there can
be no sugar-coating the dark intent of this message - which not only conflates
two unrelated, if equally race-laden, situations with the author’s obvious implication
that Zimmerman had done society a favor. Richard Sherman’s response to these on-line
race-inflected taunts was haunting in its simplicity:
"I thought society had moved past that."
How ironic, then, that the tantrum and its race-infused backlash
occurred over the course of the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday weekend. The
irony, however, isn’t limited to these two overlapping events; but to the
holiday itself. Only students of history
will necessarily remember that it took over 15 years, nine million signatures
on two different petitions and a House defeat (by 5 votes) in 1979, before
Congress finally passed a Bill authorizing a Federal holiday honoring Dr. King.
At the time, only 27 states and the District
of Columbia implemented the holiday and it wasn’t
until 1992 that Arizona
adopted it. The last state to adopt the
holiday - South Carolina
- did so in 2000, the same year it permanently lowered the Confederate flag
from its statehouse dome.
February is
Black History Month. Since 1976 every US President has issued a
proclamation acknowledging its significance.
Many schools devote whole weeks to the study of race relations and
African-American issues. So, when I asked my Mentor Class whether we still
needed a Black History Month, I took note of their lack of concern (interest?)
in the topic - this took place before Sherman ’s
MLK tantrum and backlash. In that
conversation, I came to realize that, for today’s young people, Black History
Month is exactly that - history; not something that necessarily touches their
present situation - as opposed to those of us past a certain age who remember
the marches, lunch counter sit-ins and Birmingham Sheriff Bull Connor’s water
cannons blasting away at protesting men, women and children.
Our society
may have moved past the physical violence prevalent in the South during the
Civil Rights era (and in the North during court-mandated school desegregation
plans in the 1970’s); but this year’s Martin Luther King weekend will be
remembered for the intellectual violence that spewed veiled and not-so veiled
racial vitriol across the Internet in response to a testosterone-fueled tantrum
by a young African-American athlete.
Boston Globe Columnist, Christopher Gasper, got it right, I think, when he wrote:
The real loud and clear statement made by Sherman ’s post game comments is that
stereotyping African-American males is still an American pastime.
The events of January 19/20, when Richard Sherman became a household
name in ways that proved to be unbelievably unattractive, suggest that society
hasn’t gotten past it’s fixation on race. Our young people still need to care
about the polarizing effects of racial animosity.
I think it will be quite
awhile before the imperative behind Black History Month will no longer be
necessary.
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