Have you watched little children play? They
display no race or culture discrimination on the playground. Little girls will
run up to little boys they do not know and play tag. Children will invite
friends home, and parents are sometimes taken aback when the friend turns out
to be someone from a different racial group, or someone in a wheelchair. So
what causes us to discriminate against people who are different from us when we
get older? The main ingredient I believe is learnt fear. And your fear may not
be my fear! An emotion that comes from fear is hatred, as well as hurt. Imagine
what a different place the world would be if we accepted others we presently
fear. Is this possible?
I believe much discrimination today occurs
due to fear, as people see some types of people as a threat, and often it is
due to a stereotype, where we place a generalised view onto people. Sometimes
discrimination happens due to lack of understanding, as we often fear objects
or individuals or events we do not understand. Discrimination may be displayed
towards one person only for a number of reasons, sometimes just due to dislike,
excluding the person from a group’s activities, or it may be towards a certain
type of people, like poor people, or rich people, or people who are physically
or intellectually challenged, or may be based on looks, or race, or culture, or
nation—I believe most people in this world, no matter who, will at some time
discriminate against someone else, be it in thought only. You may be
discriminated against on some level, yet you may also discriminate against
other people. Discrimination happens on various levels and is unfair behaviour.
Fear must come from somewhere, whether it is
by personal experience, or behaviour learnt from others. Some believe that fear
may be instinctual, like fear of snakes, but this fear is probably developed
when we hear about the dangers of snakes from other people, usually when we are
children. Some snakes are exceedingly dangerous! We often, therefore, have
compelling reasons to fear the things we fear. As an example, if you see
someone with a gun approaching you, and there is an escape route, the best
answer is to leave and hide away. Fear is a necessary protection mechanism,
signalling danger and ensuring we keep away. But much fear may be groundless,
due to misunderstanding or lack of knowledge, as we fear that which we do not
understand or trust.
Generational Discrimination
People often learn about discrimination while
they are growing up as children. In some cases, knowledge of racial or cultural
discrimination may be handed down from generation to generation. There may be
discrimination mindsets on both sides—the people who discriminate against
certain people, and the ones who are discriminated against. In many cases of
generational discrimination, past hurt runs deep. Forgiveness may not come
easily to both sides, and acceptance may be difficult.
Organisational Conformity
Organisational conformity is a process that
happens in organisations where new employees learn to behave according to the
presiding organisational culture. A new employee may start a job and see
potential for change, but change is resisted by the prevailing mindset of this is the way we do things around here. People may not blatantly state why they
believe or behave a certain way, yet it is an unspoken cultural norm, and it is
taken for granted that other people understand these unspoken rules.
When starting a new job, or assimilating into
a new culture, you will find it indispensable to wait and to first learn the
unspoken norms as a measure of respect, as unintended disrespectful gaffs can
so easily happen. I have experienced a number of occasions where I have been
ignorantly disrespectful by not understanding the expected rules. A simple
example may be sitting in the front row of a particular church for weeks, only
later finding out that the front row is reserved for leaders, though no sign is
present.
A reason I mention this here is that a similar
process may happen to a degree in situations of generational fear. Often we
no longer know why we are fighting, or why we fear certain groups, but we have
learnt to fear and avoid these people. All of us may easily offend other people
by not understanding cultural nuances, but if you realise that we are all
different, you will see that a perceived slight might have arisen due to norms
you may be aware of, whereas someone else might not be aware of these norms.
The Different Perspectives We See
Similar groups of people who live in
different countries do not always have the same stereotypes and discrimination
mindsets. I suspect that sometimes the viewpoint differs depending who is in
the majority group, the past experience of each group, and culture in general.
A Christian might be seen as a threat in one nation, and seen as safe and a
peacemaker in another nation. Someone in a wheelchair, who is ignored in one country,
might be seen as a battler and someone to embrace in another country. What do
others see when they see you or see me?
Understand
culture. Understand why some people behave the way they do. If you are not
aware of culture, you might see a problem that does not exist, or you may be
missing problems that actually do exist. Stereotypes are dangerous. Deal with
individual people, not groups of people, and at the same time understand
cultural mindsets, as these may give some answers to individual behaviour.
Did you know there are examples of wild
animals that have not encountered people before, and do not fear people? One
example of this is the dodo, and, of course, the dodo is now extinct. Dodos had
no natural predators and did not fear being hunted as food. Dodos were
extremely strong birds and were fast runners, yet people were able to approach
dodos and easily kill them, and rats and monkeys introduced by people to the
dodo’s habitat were another reason for dodos being hunted to extermination. A
lesson from this is that we only fear what seems to be dangerous based on our
own experiences, and also that we may miss danger we should fear. Sometimes we
fear things we should not, and are complacent about things we should actually
fear and avoid. Often threats come from where we least expect them to
originate, especially if we are blind, like the dodo, to seeing threats we have
no historical memory of, and these may even be right in our midst.
In
another example of complacency, I once stopped our car at a rest spot in the
Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, where I saw we were allowed to alight from the
vehicle to use nearby toilets. The Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park is a park on
the northern most tip of South Africa and is a true wilderness bastion, where
black-maned lions roam at will, as well as other wildlife like leopards and
giraffes and snakes. You get my point! So here we were, stopping at an unfenced
spot where we were allowed to get out of the car at our own risk, and where we
were about to meander over to the toilets at leisure. As I was about to get out
of the car, I glanced in my rear view mirror, and was horrified to see a pride
of a few lions lounging lazily in the shade of a spreading nearby tree,
probably less than 15 metres away from where my husband was rifling through the
boot of our car. I only saw them because one lioness moved slightly to shift
position, or they would have remained camouflaged. I screamed “Get in the car”,
and he listened to me after some slight hesitation, and was of course amazed
when I showed him the lions too. Just because a spot in the desert has toilets
erected with a sign inviting use, does not mean it is safe!
Be on
guard against complacency. Understand emotions involved in fear and scrutinise
for repeating patterns where problems might occur. Understand mindsets that run
deep. Search for solutions for positive change for all of us. Do not be
complacent.
The Gorilla Hidden in the Open
Sometimes we do not see potential problems
that are billowing right in the midst of us. In a video, which I have seen a
few times at various training courses, our group was asked to count a
particular sequence of events. We got to the end of the video, and were asked
how many events we counted, which we gave. We were then asked what else we saw,
and when most saw nothing else that stood out, we were asked to watch the video
again without counting, and were amazed to see someone in a hulking black
gorilla suit wander through the field of play. No-one had seen the gorilla in the
midst of all the concentrating we were doing counting! Step back sometimes and
observe the bigger picture. What are you missing that might be right in front
of you?
Another
example where we might miss seeing a threat is when we see someone or something
day after day—like familiar strangers. The first time you see something amiss
about a person, you might glance surreptitiously at the person concerned,
gauging whether or not the person presents a problem. You may also check to see
if anyone else sees a threat, and base your decision on this accordingly. As
time goes on, you become attenuated to seeing the person, and the threat seems
to recede, until the person is just another part of the background. Why were
you on your guard when you first saw the person? Was there a threat or not? Is
the threat any less now because you see the person often? This is similar to
habituation of Mountain Gorillas, who are used to seeing tourists, and do not
see these people as a threat, however, the unfortunate consequence is that
these gorillas may not see poachers as a threat either. Be on guard against
complacency.
Thoughts on Interpersonal Fear
Often we
fear because our identity and our way of life are at stake. We may believe
others will change us, that they threaten our beliefs, or our culture, or may
do away with our standard of living if there are not enough resources to go
around. We may fear religion, because some of these beliefs threaten the way we
think about the world. Discussing politics and religion may cause conflict, because
these topics touch on the heart of what we believe to be true and right, our
ethics and morals. Imagine a world where we are all free to be who we are, to
stand strong in our own culture and religion, and to understand and accept other
people for who they are. Imagine caring for others instead of excluding them.
Imagine learning from our collective past, changing mindsets, and stopping
cycles where each successive majority may isolate new minorities. Imagine a
world that is free and without oppression of any kind. It starts with me and
you.
In the Bible, Paul said that perfect love casteth out fear, 1 John 4:18 (KJV): “There is no fear in
love; but perfect love casteth out fear: because fear hath torment. He that
feareth is not made perfect in love.”. Perhaps when we all learn how to
love each other and live peacefully, we will not fear each other. Imagine...
No comments:
Post a Comment