c.2019, Atria
$26 ($35 Canada)
208 pages

You could be rich someday.

Thatโ€™s what they say: you could have a great job, a nice car, and a crib on the beach, if you want them. They say it could happen, if you seize opportunities that come your way. They say itโ€™s possible to be successful if you just pull yourself up by some imaginary bootstraps. And according to D. Watkins in his new book โ€œWe Speak for Ourselves,โ€ they are lying.

Oprah, Jay-Z, Beyonce, Kanye. Of course, you know who they are, but did you ever notice that they arenโ€™t like most Black people?

Thatโ€™s something D. Watkins sees in the books he reads on race, in the TV he watches, and events he attends: there are โ€œdifferent types of Black peopleโ€ and when it comes to news and โ€œmaybe even in societyโ€ฆ. People from the street are absentโ€ฆโ€

In Watkinsโ€™ world โ€” โ€œDown Bottomโ€ in Baltimore โ€” gunfire is a common background noise. Itโ€™s also common for multiple generations of Black men to die by bullets, for girls to get pregnant early, and for boys to sling drugs.

What else do they know, except what they see? Kids on the street are not โ€œdumb,โ€ he says, but a โ€œstreet hustler mentalityโ€ is given to them as a sort of heritage because there arenโ€™t a lot of choices, opportunities are few, and the need for money is powerful. It doesnโ€™t help that education for Black students is often underfunded, proper nourishment is sometimes lacking, housing may be sub-par, โ€œopen-air drug markets are real,โ€ cops can be โ€œmore crooked than the crooks,โ€ and โ€œBlack Taxesโ€ exist.

And yet, Watkins is proof that success is possible, but itโ€™ll take action. Promote literacy. Teach a child something. Get to know people who are different than you. โ€œBe the person you needed growing up.โ€ Speak up, but remember that your voice wonโ€™t mean a thing โ€œif action is not added to those words.โ€

Sometimes it happens: your eyes are open but you canโ€™t see. When author D. Watkins writes, though, youโ€™re smacked with the very thing youโ€™re missing.

Watkins, who starts โ€œWe Speak for Ourselvesโ€ with a cocktail party attended by elite Blacks, turns his attention quickly to the majority of Black people he knows, none of whom are rich or famous. This tour, if you will, takes readers into his neighborhood through a voice that quietly hammers home the realities of privilege, inequality, poverty and feelings of helplessness, but Watkins doesnโ€™t let us linger there.

Observant readers will find simple actions for change-making and reminders that we always hold the power to act. Thereโ€™s quiet advice for keeping a cool head when wrongs are presented, and a gently urgent plea that differently-backgrounded people spend time together. Thereโ€™s also one hilariously subtle thread of humor, so look for it.

No matter which part of the sidewalk you occupy, this short, quick book is a must-read if you worry about our future. โ€œWe Speak for Ourselvesโ€ offers the beginnings of a map forward, and in thought-provoking ideas, itโ€™s rich.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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