What White Feminists Take for Granted About Mother's Day

Last week, I watched a stark racial divide develop among my social media friends, many of whom are progressive clergy members, academics, and social justice activists. The divide in itself was not unusual. I have noticed it each time that some major social justice concern has occurred, whether it is the impending execution of a White woman, the video recording of police killing an unarmed Black person, or the unjust conviction and sentencing of a Black woman defending herself from an abusive partner. Just like most of U.S. society, social justice concerns tend to be divided along racial, ethnic, and class lines. So the mostly White activists organizing on behalf of Kelly Gissandaner were largely silent about Marissa Alexander. And the mostly Black female crowd organizing on behalf of Marissa is largely silent about Kelly.
Every article had some variation of the same argument: Mother's Day is bad because it makes too big a deal of mothers.
It was bizarre that so many people spent time complaining about a day they think receives too much attention. It was even more bizarre that it was mostly my White feminist friends who kept posting these articles on social media, with comments such as, "This writer says everything I ever thought about Mother's Day." In contrast, my Black, Latino, Asian, and Native American friends and acquaintances were largely silent on the issue.
Actually, they were not silent. They were posting photos of and tributes to the women who have mothered them, to those whose mothering they admire, and even to the children who have made them mothers. They posted articles about women of color whose rights to mother were taken away by hospitals and Christian missionaries who stole their babies, by states who forcibly sterilized them, and by a society that undervalues them.
I suppose it's much easier to denigrate a day that venerates motherhood when it is your culture's ideal of motherhood that's being elevated, when your right and capacity to mother have never been systemically questioned, threatened, or denied. But for some of us, motherhood has not always been a crystal stair.
Tread lightly, my white feminist sisters. Your privilege is showing.
Photo: Shutterstock
This piece previously appeared on the author's blog under a different title.
Dr. Chanequa Walker-Barnes is the author of Too Heavy a Yoke: Black Women and the Burden of Strength. A theologian and psychologist, she teaches pastoral care and counseling at Mercer University. You can follow her on Twitter @DrChanequa.
Photo: Shutterstock
This piece previously appeared on the author's blog under a different title.
Dr. Chanequa Walker-Barnes is the author of Too Heavy a Yoke: Black Women and the Burden of Strength. A theologian and psychologist, she teaches pastoral care and counseling at Mercer University. You can follow her on Twitter @DrChanequa.
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