Clint Smith: How to raise a black son in America
Clint Smith: Hvordan man opdrager en sort søn i Amerika
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altid forstå
follow the rules that they did.
følge deres regler.
have to mow the lawn?
slå græsplænen?
in my oatmeal?
i min havregrød?
with questions like this.
and realizing that sometimes,
finde ud af, at nogen gange
even when I didn't exactly understand why.
selv når jeg ikke rigtig forstod hvorfor.
me to think critically.
jeg skulle tænke kritisk.
to reconcile the tension
spændingen
understand the realities of the world,
forstå realiteten i verden,
the status quo as inevitable.
status quo som uundgåeligt.
in and of itself,
i og med sig selv,
form for opdragelse.
Brazilian author and scholar Paulo Freire,
brasilianske lærde forfatter Paulo Freire,
about the need for education
behovet for uddannelse
awakening and shared humanity.
tænkning og delt menneskelighed.
"Pedagogy of the Oppressed,"
"Pædagogik for de Undertrykte,"
authentically human
autentisk menneskelig
lately, this idea of humanity,
idéen om menneskelighed,
is afforded the privilege
får privilegiet
the past several months,
as unarmed black men, and women,
sorte mænd og kvinder
at the hands of police and vigilante.
has transpired after them
er sket efter dem
about raising a black boy in America
om at opdrage en sort dreng i Amerika
understand in the way that I do now.
altid tingene som jeg gør nu.
how profoundly unfair it must have felt
og hvor uretfærdigt det har virket
to strip away parts of my childhood
fjerne dele af min barndom
overnight field trip to another city,
overnattende ekskursion til en anden by,
købte Super Soakers
into our own water-filled battle zone.
til vor egen oversvømmede krigszone.
lay between the streetlights,
across the pavement.
på det fortov.
grabbed me by my forearm
with an unfamiliar grip.
med et hårdt greb.
made me look in front of my friends,
i mine venners øjne,
fear consuming his face,
frygt i ansigtet,
as your white friends.
dine hvide venner.
other than your own teeth."
bag dine egne tænder."
into the empty of the night,
været fortabt i natten,
i parkeringspladsen
all of this away.
dette væk.
inundated with my entire life:
i overflod hele mit liv:
can see them, don't move too quickly,
ingen drastiske bevægelser,
in an armor of advice,
med en pansermur af råd,
wouldn't steal the breath from our lungs,
at nogen ville stjæle vort åndedrag,
a memory of this skin.
not casket or concrete.
vi kunne være børn.
would make us better than anyone else
bedre end alle andre,
to keep us alive.
with the same message,
med det samme budskab
when we became old enough
to be hammered to the ground,
klare til at hamre i jorden,
synonymous with something to be feared.
med noget at være bange for.
cannot simply be a child?
du simpelthen ikke kan være et barn?
are too dangerous for your breath,
for farlige for dig,
of making a mistake,
luksus det er at lave en fejl,
wake up in the morning.
ikke vågner næste morgen.
who raised us to understand
der opdrog os til at forstå
for the backside of a bullet,
at være skjolde for kugler
and laughing until our stomachs burst.
og le til vi får ondt i maven.
how to raise our hands in class,
hænderne op i klassen,
aren't worthy of this world.
denne verden værdige.
it's not because others don't,
siger vi ikke andre ikke har,
are worthy of existing without fear,
ret til eksistere uden frygt,
at vi ikke har.
the moment he is born,
snart han er født,
for anything other than a toy.
forveksles med andet end et legetøj.
build this world into something new,
kan ændre denne verden til et sted,
on a t-shirt, or a tombstone,
eller en gravsten,
than the fact that they had lungs,
de havde lunger,
one of us can breathe.
kan trække vejret.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Clint Smith - Poet, educatorClint Smith's work blends art and activism.
Why you should listen
Clint Smith is a writer, teacher and doctoral candidate at Harvard University studying education, incarceration and inequality. Previously, he taught high school English in Prince George’s County, Maryland where, in 2013, he was named the Christine D. Sarbanes Teacher of the Year by the Maryland Humanities Council.
Clint is a 2014 National Poetry Slam champion, an Individual World Poetry Slam Finalist, and author of the poetry collection Counting Descent. He has received fellowships from the National Science Foundation, Cave Canem and the Callaloo Creative Writing Workshop. His writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The Guardian, Boston Review, American Poetry Review, Harvard Educational Review and elsewhere. He was born and raised in New Orleans, LA.
Clint Smith | Speaker | TED.com