In the middle of the journey of my life, I am--as always--a woman on a bike. Although I do not know where this road will lead, the way is not lost, for I have arrived here. And I am on my bicycle, again.
I am Justine Valinotti.
19 August 2018
18 August 2018
Biking While Black
I read Huey Newton's Revolutionary Suicide many years ago. As I recall, it recounts, among other things, his and his peers' often-tense interactions with the police of his native Oakland. Many of the incidents would today be called Driving (or Walking, Barbecuing, Reading or Fill-in-the-Activity of Your Choice) While Black.
Frustration over such incidents inspired him and his friends to start the Black Panther Party. Whether or not you agree with his way of dealing with the poverty, racism and violence that defined life on the mean streets where he grew up, it's hard to argue against his observations and analysis. After all, so much of what he described could have happened yesterday.
As a matter of fact, it did--or, two weeks ago, anyway. On 3 August, Najari "Naj" Smith was leading a group of 40 young cyclists through the streets of Oakland on a regularly-scheduled First Friday ride. You guessed it: He and most of those cyclists are black.
They all belong to organizations that consist mainly of African-American members. One of those organizations, Rich City Rides, was founded and is led by "Naj" himself in the nearby city of Richmond. RCR teaches young people bicycle mechanics and gives them opportunities to work for their own bicycles. It also offers guidance on healthy lifestyles and positive social interactions through group rides, public path maintenance and civic advocacy on transportation issues.
It should be noted here that Richmond today, in many ways, parallels the Oakland of Huey Newton: It is darker (in skin tone) and poorer than surrounding Bay Area communities. It also, until recently, had one of the highest violent crime rates in the nation, and many residents feel they are always "under suspicion" by the police. Oakland, on the other hand, is quickly gentrifying as even well-paid professionals find themselves priced out of San Francisco and other communities on the west side of the Bay. This has exacerbated tensions between the remaining African-Americans and the Oakland Police Department (which disproportionately stops and arrests African-Americans) not to mention the white gentrifiers who too often call the police when black people simply live their lives in public.
Such was the case two weeks ago, when someone apparently complained about Naj and the other riders when they formed a "bonding and healing circle". A police officer broke into it without warning and grabbed Naj's handlebars.
The officer explained that Naj was being detained for "excessive noise" coming from a stereo on a trailer behind his bike. Smith says he immediately complied with the officer's request and turned off the stereo. The officer told him to "stay put" and momentarily walked away. Smith thought the officer was going to write him a citation. Instead, the cop handcuffed him, confiscated his bicycle and stereo equipment and whisked him off to the Santa Rita Jail, where he spent the weekend. Smith made his $5000 bail and has a court date for the 31st of this month.
"I cooperated with the officer as much as possible," Smith said. Members of the group were upset and he was "trying to put the best example forward" so the incident "wouldn't turn into a mess."
It seems, though, that no amount of compliance is any match for police officers who make up the rules as they go along. According to Oakland PD spokesperson Felicia Aisthorpe, Smith was detained for "interfering with traffic and playing music too loudly." Moreover, she said, he did not have proper identification. (Italics mine.)
The officer who stopped me in Harrison two years ago was looking to make the same charge against me. As it happened, I had my New York State non-drivers' ID with me. He tried to claim that he could arrest me for not having "official" ID; I countered that the document was issued by the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles and is therefore official. He wasn't too pleased with that; so he wrote a citation with the largest fine he could get away with.
Since then, I've checked with a number of reputable sources, all of whom confirmed what I'd already known: that there is no law in New York State (Harrison is in Westchester County) or anywhere in the US that requires people to carry ID or to show it to police officers. But I carry mine with me anyway for situations like the one I've described.
Whether or not "Naj" Smith had his ID on him or needed it probably isn't the real issue, as far as Ms. Aisthorpe and the arresting officer are concerned. He is from Richmond and he was in Oakland, cycling while black.
Frustration over such incidents inspired him and his friends to start the Black Panther Party. Whether or not you agree with his way of dealing with the poverty, racism and violence that defined life on the mean streets where he grew up, it's hard to argue against his observations and analysis. After all, so much of what he described could have happened yesterday.
As a matter of fact, it did--or, two weeks ago, anyway. On 3 August, Najari "Naj" Smith was leading a group of 40 young cyclists through the streets of Oakland on a regularly-scheduled First Friday ride. You guessed it: He and most of those cyclists are black.
They all belong to organizations that consist mainly of African-American members. One of those organizations, Rich City Rides, was founded and is led by "Naj" himself in the nearby city of Richmond. RCR teaches young people bicycle mechanics and gives them opportunities to work for their own bicycles. It also offers guidance on healthy lifestyles and positive social interactions through group rides, public path maintenance and civic advocacy on transportation issues.
It should be noted here that Richmond today, in many ways, parallels the Oakland of Huey Newton: It is darker (in skin tone) and poorer than surrounding Bay Area communities. It also, until recently, had one of the highest violent crime rates in the nation, and many residents feel they are always "under suspicion" by the police. Oakland, on the other hand, is quickly gentrifying as even well-paid professionals find themselves priced out of San Francisco and other communities on the west side of the Bay. This has exacerbated tensions between the remaining African-Americans and the Oakland Police Department (which disproportionately stops and arrests African-Americans) not to mention the white gentrifiers who too often call the police when black people simply live their lives in public.
Najari "Naj" Smith |
Such was the case two weeks ago, when someone apparently complained about Naj and the other riders when they formed a "bonding and healing circle". A police officer broke into it without warning and grabbed Naj's handlebars.
The officer explained that Naj was being detained for "excessive noise" coming from a stereo on a trailer behind his bike. Smith says he immediately complied with the officer's request and turned off the stereo. The officer told him to "stay put" and momentarily walked away. Smith thought the officer was going to write him a citation. Instead, the cop handcuffed him, confiscated his bicycle and stereo equipment and whisked him off to the Santa Rita Jail, where he spent the weekend. Smith made his $5000 bail and has a court date for the 31st of this month.
"I cooperated with the officer as much as possible," Smith said. Members of the group were upset and he was "trying to put the best example forward" so the incident "wouldn't turn into a mess."
It seems, though, that no amount of compliance is any match for police officers who make up the rules as they go along. According to Oakland PD spokesperson Felicia Aisthorpe, Smith was detained for "interfering with traffic and playing music too loudly." Moreover, she said, he did not have proper identification. (Italics mine.)
The officer who stopped me in Harrison two years ago was looking to make the same charge against me. As it happened, I had my New York State non-drivers' ID with me. He tried to claim that he could arrest me for not having "official" ID; I countered that the document was issued by the New York State Department of Motor Vehicles and is therefore official. He wasn't too pleased with that; so he wrote a citation with the largest fine he could get away with.
Since then, I've checked with a number of reputable sources, all of whom confirmed what I'd already known: that there is no law in New York State (Harrison is in Westchester County) or anywhere in the US that requires people to carry ID or to show it to police officers. But I carry mine with me anyway for situations like the one I've described.
Whether or not "Naj" Smith had his ID on him or needed it probably isn't the real issue, as far as Ms. Aisthorpe and the arresting officer are concerned. He is from Richmond and he was in Oakland, cycling while black.
17 August 2018
Why We Need Her: Aretha Franklin
Spoiler Alert: Today's post is on a non-cycling topic.
The other day, the Andrew Cuomo said something that will probably haunt him for the rest of his days: "America was never that great."
Now, I just happen to think that Cuomo wasn't expressing a lack of patriotism. Rather, I think the utterance shows, more than anything, that he doesn't quite share his father's intelligence or eloquence.
I'm guessing that he was trying to refute Trump's oft-echoed mantra: Make America Great Again. If anything, I would say that America was never great (rather than "not that great") because no nation in the history of this world has ever been great. Some nations have been powerful, have been mighty. Others have been prosperous; still others, influential. A few nations have combined more than one of those qualities.
But no nation* has ever been great, including my own.
To me, the proof is this: Aretha Franklin. No one ever would have sounded the way she did had her nation, or any other, had been great. In fact, nobody ever could have sounded like that, like her.
If any nation in history had ever been great, there never would have been any need for someone to sound like her. And that's why, to me, almost all of her work is art of the highest order.
Yes, I said art. I see no contradiction between it and popular music or other entertainments. Shakespeare was popular in his own time; so were any number of painters and sculptors who received commissions from wealthy patrons and whose works we gaze at, with awe, in museums and galleries today.
Of course, we've all heard Natural Woman and Respect. In those songs, she combines vulnerability and strength, anger and empathy, joy and grief, need and the yearning for freedom, the need to sing and the urge to fly, better than just about anyone who's ever sung. In other words, she captures the complexity--and the fearsome complications--of our existence.
For my money, though, her best expression of the gifts only she could bring us was on I Never Loved A Man. On the surface, it seems like just a song that expresses--if you'll pardon my appropriating the title of an '80s self-help book--the dilemma of a woman who loves too much, or at least seems to love the wrong man. But, to me, it's really about being beaten down and beaten up by, not only another person, but by life itself--and realizing that the only choice is to move forward. The world is excruciating, people are mean, and her man is cruel--but she cannot do anything but love: love him, love the world. I think it's what W.H. Auden meant when he wrote, "We must love one another or die."
That song alone would place her in my pantheon of great American artists. To me, it's worthy of Leaves of Grass, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Kind of Blue,Christina's World, The Great Gatsby, Citizen Kane, Blue and Green Music, the first Godfather film and Rhapsody in Blue.
Now Aretha Franklin is gone. Well, she--her body--has left us. But not the body of her work. As long as there are no great nations, we'll need it. And if there ever is a great nation, we'll have the luxury of simply savoring it.
*--By "nation", I mean geo-political entities, which are not to be confused with the cultures or peoples contained within them, which often are great.
The other day, the Andrew Cuomo said something that will probably haunt him for the rest of his days: "America was never that great."
Now, I just happen to think that Cuomo wasn't expressing a lack of patriotism. Rather, I think the utterance shows, more than anything, that he doesn't quite share his father's intelligence or eloquence.
I'm guessing that he was trying to refute Trump's oft-echoed mantra: Make America Great Again. If anything, I would say that America was never great (rather than "not that great") because no nation in the history of this world has ever been great. Some nations have been powerful, have been mighty. Others have been prosperous; still others, influential. A few nations have combined more than one of those qualities.
But no nation* has ever been great, including my own.
To me, the proof is this: Aretha Franklin. No one ever would have sounded the way she did had her nation, or any other, had been great. In fact, nobody ever could have sounded like that, like her.
If any nation in history had ever been great, there never would have been any need for someone to sound like her. And that's why, to me, almost all of her work is art of the highest order.
Yes, I said art. I see no contradiction between it and popular music or other entertainments. Shakespeare was popular in his own time; so were any number of painters and sculptors who received commissions from wealthy patrons and whose works we gaze at, with awe, in museums and galleries today.
Of course, we've all heard Natural Woman and Respect. In those songs, she combines vulnerability and strength, anger and empathy, joy and grief, need and the yearning for freedom, the need to sing and the urge to fly, better than just about anyone who's ever sung. In other words, she captures the complexity--and the fearsome complications--of our existence.
For my money, though, her best expression of the gifts only she could bring us was on I Never Loved A Man. On the surface, it seems like just a song that expresses--if you'll pardon my appropriating the title of an '80s self-help book--the dilemma of a woman who loves too much, or at least seems to love the wrong man. But, to me, it's really about being beaten down and beaten up by, not only another person, but by life itself--and realizing that the only choice is to move forward. The world is excruciating, people are mean, and her man is cruel--but she cannot do anything but love: love him, love the world. I think it's what W.H. Auden meant when he wrote, "We must love one another or die."
That song alone would place her in my pantheon of great American artists. To me, it's worthy of Leaves of Grass, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Kind of Blue,Christina's World, The Great Gatsby, Citizen Kane, Blue and Green Music, the first Godfather film and Rhapsody in Blue.
Now Aretha Franklin is gone. Well, she--her body--has left us. But not the body of her work. As long as there are no great nations, we'll need it. And if there ever is a great nation, we'll have the luxury of simply savoring it.
*--By "nation", I mean geo-political entities, which are not to be confused with the cultures or peoples contained within them, which often are great.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)