Black People Can Be Racist After All

Arah Iloabugichukwu
10 min readFeb 2, 2022

And Apparently, We’ve Perfected the Practice

Disclaimer: This article explores the experience of internalized racial oppression, it is not a claim that white people can, in any way, be the victims of racism. There is no such thing as reverse racism. Racism, and other systems of oppression, do not operate in reverse.

From as early as I can remember, the Bible to my Black womanhood consisted of two Psalms, the first read that racism accounted for Black people’s most pressing problem; and the second said that black people were systematically, institutionally, and physically excluded from its practice. And these Psalms were galvanized as gospel. I liken the indoctrination we underwent in the aisles of Black identity to taking an oath, albeit under duress. Part of being in the Black community meant adhering to the creed and the creed said the fight was against white because white had all the power. No questions asked. Every other experience, no matter how similar it seemed, was seen as secondary to white supremacy, a conspired distraction from the real dilemma facing black bodies.

However, my lived experiences did little to lay a groundwork of evidence in support of this argument, quite the contrary. In my neighborhood, in my church, and in my grandmother’s kitchen is where I first learned that the blacker the body, the rougher the…

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Arah Iloabugichukwu

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