c.2017, St. Martinโ€™s Press
$24.99 ($34.99 Canada)
228 pages

I know what youโ€™re thinking.

Youโ€™ve said that before, to a furrowed brow, a mischievous smile, a child whoโ€™s about to do something sneaky. You can see it in the eyes, the body language, the tone of voice, and you know just what theyโ€™re thinking. But until youโ€™ve read โ€œTears We Cannot Stopโ€ by Michael Eric Dyson, you might not really have a clue.

You watch the news, you read the paper, and you know that things arenโ€™t going well in our country. Much of it, says Dyson, can be blamed on race, and the fixes he believes are needed are most eloquently said in a sermon.

Racism, he says is โ€œpoison.โ€ For black people, thatโ€™s not a possibility, itโ€™s a fact. Itโ€™s seen in courtrooms and streets, colleges and workplaces, neighborhoods and prisons. It means that black parents must specifically remind their children how to act around police officers, an everyday caution that white people rarely need to worry about, but โ€œthat can mean the difference between life and death for [African-Americans].โ€

Most white people, he says, are racist, even if they donโ€™t mean to be. Some of them donโ€™t even know theyโ€™re racist; or theyโ€™ll deny it, until they read a book like this one with truths laid bare. African-Americans know that subversive, deeply-buried kind of racism and they discuss it with one another but rarely with whites; most whites donโ€™t know or donโ€™t think about it because they werenโ€™t taught it. Instead, itโ€™s a legacy of skin color, passed down for centuries.

White people have an advantage, says Dyson, by merely being white. โ€œWhite privilegeโ€ opens doors. It doesnโ€™t worry about dying in a police encounter. White privilege offers higher-paying jobs and nicer homes. It enjoys โ€œa way of life that comes at the direct expense of other folk who are denied the privileges you take for granted.โ€ โ€จSo what can be done?

โ€œBeloved,โ€ says Dyson, the first step is to wake up to the advantages of being white, realize the wrongness of it, and admit it. Demand justice for injustices. And be open and willing to be R.E.S.P.O.N.S.I.V.E.

Got a comfortable chair to relax in? If not, then get one. โ€œTears We Cannot Stopโ€ is going to keep you there.

Yes, thereโ€™s controversy in what author Michael Eric Dyson states, but it will also open a lot of eyes. To get readers there, Dyson chides as deftly as he uses outrage and sorrow, but his point never wavers: we will not fix this country until we get to the root of racism and that must start with the education of, and mind-set-change within, white America. He offers ideas here on how that can happen, as well as musings on cultural assimilation, racial epithets, and the re-writing of history.

At just 228 pages, this might seem like a small, quick read, though itโ€™s anything but. Instead, be ready to pause nearly every other sentence, absorb what is said, and prepare for action. โ€œTears We Cannot Stopโ€ is meant to change your thinking.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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