6 Strategies for South Asians to Talk About Black Lives Matter with Family

Originally published on To Speak a Song and republished here with their permission.

Large family gathered in a living room, spanning a variety of ages with different facial expressions (ranging from serious to smiling).

Large family gathered in a living room, spanning a variety of ages with different facial expressions (ranging from serious to smiling).

It’s getting to that holiday time again, and many of us will be spending time with our families, given and chosen.

If your family is anything like mine – South Asian, upper middle class, and oftentimes conservative – you’re starting to wonder how you will navigate the hard conversations that come up year after year.

You’re beginning to feel the dread. You’re gearing up to hold and argue about the enormity of what’s going on in this country right now.

How you will argue with racist aunts about police brutality against black folks or listen in disbelief to your father stand up for local law enforcement? You can feel the frustration build.

Change starts small, and the revolution starts at home.

For those of us who are queer, it’s not always safe to directly confront our families of origin, if we’re even still in touch with them. However, I want to challenge us to have the hard conversations when we can.

To push our own growing edges, and to sit in the discomfort that comes with challenging our people on our racism. On pushing back on our communities’ anti-Blackness. As non-Black people of color, this is our work – our work. Nobody else can do this for us. Nobody else should have to.

Ella Baker used to ask “Who are your people?” as an entry point into movement work. I know my answer. My people include my family, and I refuse to leave them behind.

This year, I want to be ready to engage my family in conversations about police brutality, about how and why #BlackLivesMatter should matter to them, too.

These suggestions aren’t one-size-fits all, and they won’t work for everyone. They are ideas that come specifically from my family’s location in the US: as first-generation immigrants, non-Black South Asians, upper middle class families, living in the suburbs of LA. These strategies certainly don’t encompass the diversity of our families, our communities, and our strategies.

This is geared towards informal conversations, for those moments where you’re cooking dinner together, watching TV, or just catching up. If you’re looking for curriculum to run a more formal workshop geared at challenging anti-Black racism in South Asian communities, I encourage you to check out QSANN’s guide here.

These are some of the strategies I’m planning on using to engage in these hard conversations.

I invite you to add your own suggestions to the list.

1. Ask About Your Family’s Experiences with the Police

You might be surprised.

As people racialized as brown in the US, many of our folks have had hard experiences with the police. We haven’t, as communities, experienced nearly the same degree of police violence that Black people have. But there’s a starting point here.

Ask if your dad has ever been pulled over unfairly by the police. Ask if your mom has ever been afraid to pass through TSA at the airport. Ask when your family members have experienced discrimination, and how they’ve responded.

And once you ask, listen and learn from what your family has to say.

When I got off my social justice high horse and asked my family about their experiences with post-9/11 discrimination, I was surprised. We broke open a conversation about Islamophobia, profiling, and police discrimination, even (or especially) in the white suburbs.

Respect the experiences, the knowledge, the brilliance in your own family. You may have some radical aunties and not even know it.

2. Make It Personal

Why do you care about police brutality, about Black lives, about building a multi-racial movement? Not with the jargon of social justice, racial justice, and movement building. Deep in your heart, why do you care?

If you can, show your emotions. Let your family see that this affects you. Talk about the story that broke your heart open, the people you call family, the friends who patiently guided you into this work.

Let them know that you cried for two hours after hearing your students talk about the fragility of their lives, that you called in sick to work the day after Darren Wilson’s non-indictment. Let them know that you sometimes worry about your dark-skinned brother.

Your own story and process may help guide other people through theirs.

3. Center People’s Humanity

Part of widespread, historical, institutional racism in this country is that Black people are seen as less than human. The media certainly isn’t portraying Black victims of police brutality as people; in fact, they’re taking every opportunity to demonize Black victims, and putting them on trial.

Shift the narrative. Tell stories about these victims as people, about their families. Talk about their parents, their partners, their friends, their kids.

If your family doesn’t want to believe you, ask them if they’ve experienced this: Have they been accused of being “terrorists?” Have they been spoken to in mocking, broken English? Have they been denied opportunities because of dehumanizing assumptions made about them?

This isn’t the same as the deadly racism that Black people challenge every day, but this is, again, a starting point. Remind your family members that these are real lives at stake, not just statistics. Remind your family that these lives are worth far more than a few cigarillos, or a handful of cigarettes.

4. Know Your History

And do your research ahead of time.

Police brutality is hardly a new conversation in America. Know how prisons became the mass industry they are now, how policing and police brutality were developed as forms of control.

Know the history of the 1965 Hart-Celler Act. Be able to speak to the ways that South Asians have been used as part of a “model minority.”

Know your facts – and your history. These histories are hidden because they speak truth. Being able to paint a historical picture may change people’s minds.

5. Ask Questions

For those of us who live and breathe this work and these conversations, we can forget that we all had a learning curve, too. Sometimes, we need to start by asking questions: Have you been following the news? What do you think? Are your co-workers talking about this?

Our families don’t always have access to the political spaces that we do. They may need the space to start piecing through their own responses, and their own ideas. It can be hard to hear where people are at, and you may not want to listen to your family hash through their racism.

But again, this is how we do our part.

We ask our white friends to do their work as allies, and to use their white privilege to make waves in white communities.

Don’t make Black communities ask the same of us. This is our work, not theirs.

6. Be Patient and Listen

Change takes time.

You might not convince your racist cousin to change his mind overnight, but you might get him thinking.

Your goal isn’t to make your family agree with you in one conversation; you want to start the gears turning, ask the questions that get people questioning their own beliefs.

If we’re serious about being #APIs4BlackLives, we need to be patient. We need to be in this work for the long haul.

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Sasha W. was born and raised in the suburbs of LA and ended up in the Midwest, with a pit stop in Philadelphia. She grew up as a second generation queer Sri Lankan, surrounded by the often unnamed identity politics and crises of diaspora. Currently, she works as the Social Justice Education Specialist at UW-Madison’s Multicultural Student Center. She develops and facilitates workshops through their Institute for Justice Education and Transformation (IJET) program and builds community with college students of color. Learn more about her here.

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