Between Quvenzhane and a Hard Place

[col. writ. 2/27/13] (c)’13 Mumia Abu-Jamal
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Never let it be said that I don’t have a sense of humor, for those who know me will attest that I can be as silly as a goose.
I find laughter healing and restorative.
And yet, some attempts at comedy leave me cold, especially when the butt of the jokes are Black people–or children.
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Which brings me to the present dust-up surrounding the adorable little girl, Quvenzhane Wallis, the leading actor in „Beasts of the Southern Wild“, a film on Katrina-era New Orleans.
According to published reports, the satirical news journal, The Onion, referred to the child with an epithet, shall we say, which rhymes with the word ‚runt‘ •
Incredible.
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The Onion promptly issued its mea culpas–‚our bad! ‚–’sorry‘ , but the damage is done.
A child, a brilliant, beautiful little girl no less, is slapped with a word that shouldn’t exist in her 9-year old vocabulary.
Would the [then] child actress, Tatum O’Neal ever have been subjected to such a term? What of the pre-teen actress Dakota Fanning?
I think not.
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But in this ‚post-racial‘ era, where Black folks are fair game once more, and silenced by the shimmering spectacle of a Black family in the White House, a
Black child may be slimed by the most sexist, most objectifying of terms.
Misogyny in embryo.
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But, don’t worry.
It’s just a joke.
Can’t you take a joke?
–(c) ’13maj