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Puck welcomes John Heilemann as its Chief Political Columnist!

The Black Liberation Paradox

“Yes, I want enlightenment for white people. I just don’t want my own growth to depend on it,” Thurston writes.
“Yes, I want enlightenment for white people. I just don’t want my own growth to depend on it,” Thurston writes. Photo courtesy of PBS
Baratunde Thurston
February 19, 2023

In May 2022, a racist traveled several hours to kill 10 people at the Tops Friendly Market in a Black neighborhood in Buffalo. Last week, he was sentenced to life in prison. What I remember most about the event is that I could barely process it at the time. I was exhausted by this temporarily-latest instance of America’s oldest story: crush Black resources, Black community, Black bodies, and Black life. 

I couldn’t wade into the details at the time. I wrote recently of my decision not to watch the video of Memphis police beating to death Tyre Nichols. I believe my determination there was hardened after Buffalo. Instead of reliving that massacre, I sought out a counter-narrative. Within weeks of the incident, I found myself in my hometown of Washington, D.C., and the closest place I could go to process the tragedy was the National Museum of African-American History and Culture.