Clint Smith: How to raise a black son in America
Bagaimana membesarkan anak kulit hitam di Amerika
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
saya tidak selalu mengerti
follow the rules that they did.
aturan mereka.
have to mow the lawn?
rumput?
in my oatmeal?
dalam oatmeal saya?
with questions like this.
and realizing that sometimes,
yang menyadari bahwa kadang kala
even when I didn't exactly understand why.
walau kita tak tahu alasannya.
me to think critically.
saya berpikir kritis.
to reconcile the tension
understand the realities of the world,
atas kenyataan di dunia ini
the status quo as inevitable.
menganggap status quo itu mutlak.
in and of itself,
dalam dan akan penerapannya,
bermakna.
Brazilian author and scholar Paulo Freire,
Penulis dan sarjana Brasil, Paulo Freire
about the need for education
perlunya pendidikan
awakening and shared humanity.
dan penyebar kemanusiaan.
"Pedagogy of the Oppressed,"
"Pengajaran Bagi Orang Tertindas"
authentically human
manusia seutuhnya
untuk itu."
lately, this idea of humanity,
ide tentang kemanusiaan,
is afforded the privilege
yang mendapat keleluasaan
the past several months,
as unarmed black men, and women,
hitam yang tak bersenjata,
at the hands of police and vigilante.
polisi dan penjahat.
has transpired after them
mengikuti
about raising a black boy in America
kulit hitam di Amerika yang sedang tumbuh
understand in the way that I do now.
sekarang ini.
tidak adil rasanya buat mereka,
how profoundly unfair it must have felt
to strip away parts of my childhood
sebagian masa kecil saya
ke rumah malam hari.
overnight field trip to another city,
perjalanan ke luar kota,
into our own water-filled battle zone.
arena tempur air kami.
lay between the streetlights,
lampu jalan,
across the pavement.
di sepanjang jalan.
lengan saya
grabbed me by my forearm
with an unfamiliar grip.
dengan cengkeraman yang aneh.
made me look in front of my friends,
konyol di depan temanku,
fear consuming his face,
di wajahnya,
as your white friends.
yang berkulit putih.
other than your own teeth."
gigimu."
into the empty of the night,
mainanku
all of this away.
inundated with my entire life:
hidup saya:
can see them, don't move too quickly,
selalu, jangan bergerak terlalu cepat
terbenam.
in an armor of advice,
dalam benteng nasehat,
wouldn't steal the breath from our lungs,
akan mencuri nafas kami,
a memory of this skin.
warna kulit ini.
not casket or concrete.
bukan mayat.
would make us better than anyone else
dari anak yang lain
to keep us alive.
with the same message,
dengan pesan yang sama,
when we became old enough
jika kami cukup tua
to be hammered to the ground,
dipalu ke tanah,
synonymous with something to be feared.
sesuatu yang patut ditakuti.
cannot simply be a child?
anda tak bisa jadi sekedar anak kecil?
are too dangerous for your breath,
bagi hidupmu,
of making a mistake,
wake up in the morning.
bangun esok pagi.
who raised us to understand
untuk memahami
for the backside of a bullet,
sasaran tembak,
and laughing until our stomachs burst.
dan tertawa sampai perut kami sakit.
how to raise our hands in class,
di kelas
kami buang
aren't worthy of this world.
hidup didunia
it's not because others don't,
bukannya yang lain tidak.
are worthy of existing without fear,
tanpa rasa takut
kami tak layak.
the moment he is born,
dilahirkan,
for anything other than a toy.
bukan mainan.
build this world into something new,
membangun dunia yang baru,
on a t-shirt, or a tombstone,
di batu nisan,
than the fact that they had lungs,
bahwa dia punya paru paru,
one of us can breathe.
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