How a family's racial history made this journalist rethink racial justice

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Journalist John Blake has witnessed and written about civil rights for more than three decades, but it wasn't until he explored his own personal history that he concluded that today's racial justice movements are missing a key ingredient.

Journalist John Blake has witnessed and written about civil rights for more than three decades, but it wasn’t until he explored his own personal history that he concluded that today’s racial justice movements are missing a key ingredient.

“I think that is also an indispensable part of fighting racism, and I think we’ve forgotten that,” Blake said." is his story of growing up in west Baltimore, often without enough food to eat, without a mom.Blake, whose father was African-American, said he was a “closeted biracial” kid, who began to mark his mother’s race as Black on school forms, even though she was white. That’s because his mom disappeared when he was very young, and he was told that her family didn’t like Black people.

“So I tell people, there are things you can only learn when you’re meeting people, when you’re in contact with people, when you’re in relationship with people. You can’t read a book. You can’t put a Black Lives Matter protest sign on your lawn. You can’t go to diversity workshop. You have to be in a relationship. And once I entered that relationship with my white mom, everything began to change.”

But some experts think modern protest movements lose momentum because society has forgotten how to build effective political movements., director of Social, Cultural, and Constitutional Studies at the American Enterprise Institute.

 

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