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JHan

(10,173 posts)
Wed Aug 30, 2017, 08:27 AM Aug 2017

I went to medical school in Charlottesville. I know white anger well

For four years, my task was to learn to treat people who were sick. Even the ones who wore their Confederate pride openly, even the ones who threatened to shoot me on home health visits. My task was to learn from experienced physicians how to help people get well. Even when they witnessed racist behavior directed toward me. Even when they glossed over that bigotry.

The response to the violence in Charlottesville has had its fair share of denial — people saying, this is not the city I know, the protesters came from elsewhere, this is not the America I know.

Such statements are infuriating.

In Charlottesville, this was exactly the America I knew. This was the Virginia I knew. This was the medicine I knew. Even on graduation day, one the happiest days of my life, my family broke bread at a restaurant I later learned was owned by a man affiliated with the University of Virginia who had made controversial and racist statements.

This is the quiet racism of every day — the small transgressions that we gloss over in our daily lives. The outrage that only comes when men carrying tiki torches march openly. The America I know tolerates racism as long as it’s quiet, as long as it doesn’t cause a scene. Until it kills an innocent protester.


*snip*

As for me, a few weeks ago, an angry patient kept referring to me as “that woman.” Another patient refused to look at me, a black doctor, as she believed black people, “are more prone to violence.”

This is the America I know, the medicine I know. Bigotry in a hospital gown — it’s a risk I face every day when I go into work.

But, during the first incident, a nurse intervened, reminding the patient that I was her doctor, Dr. Okwerekwu, and deserved her respect. And during the second incident, my attending spoke up, telling the patient that her views were misinformed.

And after the second incident, my attending asked me how I was doing, how I was coping. That woman hadn’t been the first patient that week to spew racism. A team social worker, an occupational therapist, and even a medical student I was working with offered their support.

What happened when I talked about what others ignore — racism in medicine
This is the America I want. The medicine I aspire to.


https://www.statnews.com/2017/08/14/charlottesville-protest-white-anger/
15 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
I went to medical school in Charlottesville. I know white anger well (Original Post) JHan Aug 2017 OP
K&R Solly Mack Aug 2017 #1
So sorry to hear your tale SonofDonald Aug 2017 #2
In very liberal Portland OR Tavarious Jackson Aug 2017 #3
The history of Portland explains how white and racist it is. PoindexterOglethorpe Aug 2017 #5
The good doctor is so correct. Racism is tolerated as long Enoki33 Aug 2017 #4
Well said, I agree. JHan Aug 2017 #11
+2 GeoWilliam750 Aug 2017 #15
Wow, just wow...someone who is sick and in need of a doctor not wanting a doctor of color to treat.. iluvtennis Aug 2017 #6
I'm going to share something LittleGirl Aug 2017 #7
I know how difficult that is, JHan Aug 2017 #12
She was disgusted LittleGirl Aug 2017 #14
And it's the Charlottesville... zentrum Aug 2017 #8
Racism is alive and thriving thbobby Aug 2017 #9
I've read your post here with great interest... gristy Aug 2017 #10
Ty for this +++++ JHan Aug 2017 #13

SonofDonald

(2,050 posts)
2. So sorry to hear your tale
Wed Aug 30, 2017, 09:53 AM
Aug 2017

And so happy that you got through it and kept after your dreams, congratulations.

I hope your career is fulfilling and you continue on and prosper.

Thank you.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(26,727 posts)
5. The history of Portland explains how white and racist it is.
Wed Aug 30, 2017, 10:50 AM
Aug 2017

They officially did not let black people live there for a very long time.

Enoki33

(1,605 posts)
4. The good doctor is so correct. Racism is tolerated as long
Wed Aug 30, 2017, 10:29 AM
Aug 2017

as it does not make a scene. It is the subtle form, the one that seems to naturally think the worst that often is the cruelest. She is in possession of a degree of courage that not many are capable of fully understanding. She has my utmost respect.

iluvtennis

(20,864 posts)
6. Wow, just wow...someone who is sick and in need of a doctor not wanting a doctor of color to treat..
Wed Aug 30, 2017, 10:58 AM
Aug 2017

...them. I am just outraged at such ignorance. Doing my deep breathing to keep from puking at such hatred.

Thanks for posting this article.

LittleGirl

(8,439 posts)
7. I'm going to share something
Wed Aug 30, 2017, 11:04 AM
Aug 2017

my sister did. In 1997, she was in a boating accident in Michigan and was taken to a hospital in Detroit for treatment and they amputated her arm. She was drugged up on morphine the whole time and she was belligerent to the nurses or doctors. She screamed at one nurse (my Mother saw this) and she said, I don't want that N* bitch touching me. I lived in Arizona so I couldn't visit for a few weeks.

My sister and I haven't spoken in nearly 5 years and unfortunately, I ran into her in town last year on a visit back to see my Mother. I hate my sister for many reasons but her racism is one I cannot understand or tolerate. I can't believe we came from the same womb.

JHan

(10,173 posts)
12. I know how difficult that is,
Thu Aug 31, 2017, 01:57 AM
Aug 2017

how does your mother react to her behavior ( I'm curious , if you don't want to share that's okay as well)

LittleGirl

(8,439 posts)
14. She was disgusted
Thu Aug 31, 2017, 08:48 AM
Aug 2017

My mother and I are strong liberals. She accepted my spouse who is an Indian (Asian) without any issues. She loves him as much as I do. well, you know, almost as much. My mother grew up in the south as a child of a share cropper. She worked right along blacks in the fields. She doesn't have a racist bone in her body. My sister didn't learn that from family, she learned it from red neck Hoosiers in Indiana.

thbobby

(1,474 posts)
9. Racism is alive and thriving
Wed Aug 30, 2017, 11:47 AM
Aug 2017

From the grotesque display at Charlottesville to the sneaky and sublime we all see and choose to ignore.

I have often said, "Don't argue with idiots". I believe this may be a cowardly and enabling view of confronting racism.

I see racism in my Texas town often. I asked a 70-year-old neighbor his opinion of Obama. He said, "I just think they should stay on their own side of the tracks". I did not believe it was worth confronting him. 70 years old and a set in his ways, a bigot. I do not believe he is a hater. He is ignorant.

But he is a mild form of racism I encounter in North Texas. It is overwhelming. I believe I am wrong about not arguing with them. It must be confronted, exposed, and debunked with great vigor.

Racism is taught in schools, churches, family. It is tolerated in almost all social situations.

If we tolerate it, we are complicit. I am complicit and my beliefs about ignoring it were wrong. I am a 60-year-old white man. I have always known how prevalent racism is. I truly regret the times when I have not confronted it as vigorously as it deserved.

I am just so overwhelmed by it. And I am not the target of it.

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