I Am NOT Black, You Are NOT White
A video release by Prince Ea in November 2015.
This video, “I Am Not Black, You Are Not White”, was released back in November 2015 but I hadn’t seen it. It’s very powerful and speaks to the truth that’s inside us that we all feel instinctively to be correct. My comments are below the video and there’s a full transcript at the bottom of this page if you’d prefer to read the text.
The sentiments in this video agree very well with some of my recent posts, like Only oneness can survive, and A moment of love without attack.
I Am NOT Black, You Are NOT White has inspired me in many ways, but especially through a few of the messages it passes. Firstly, I like the answer to the question
“Who would you be if the world never gave you a label?” being “No. We would be one; we would be together”.
and the most powerful few lines of all;
Proving that deep down, we were meant to connect and care for each other
That is our mission, and that it’s not my opinion
That is the truth in a world that has sold us fiction
Please listen, labels only distort our vision
The mention of labels also reminded me of the “Love Has No Labels” campaign – see We Are America – Love Has No Labels and Kiss Cam – Love Has No Labels.
At the very end of the “I Am NOT Black, You Are NOT White” video, they imply that who we truly are is “Love” when the bring the word LOVE up on the screen without actually saying it. If we wanted to define who we truly are in a single word (probably can’t be defined in words at all) then the word “Love” does a pretty good job.
Full Transcript – I Am NOT Black, You are NOT White
I am not Black
I mean, that’s what the world calls me, but it’s not… me
I didn’t come out of my mother’s womb saying, “Hey everybody, I’m… Black.”
No, I was taught to be black
And you were taught to call me that
Along with whatever you call yourself
It’s just a…. labelSee, from birth the world force feeds us these…. labels
And eventually we all swallow them
We digest and accept the labels, never ever doubting them
But there’s one problem:
Labels are not you and labels are not me
Labels are just …labels
But who we truly are is not… skin… deep
See, when I drive my car, no one would ever confuse the car for…. me
Well, when I drive my ….body, why do you confuse me for my… body?
It’s…. my ….body….get it? Not meLet me break it down
See, our bodies are just cars that we operate and drive around
The dealership we call society decided to label mine the “black edition,”
Yours the “Irish” or “White edition”
And with no money down, 0% APR, and no test drive
We were forced to own these cars for the rest of our lives
Forgive me, but I fail to see the logic or pride
In defining myself or judging another by the cars we drive
Because who we truly are is found insideListen, I’m not here to tell you how science has concluded that genetically we’re all mixed
And race in the human species doesn’t exist
Or how every historian knows that race was invented in the 15th century
To divide people from each other and it has worked perfectly…
No…. I’m not here to lecture
I just want to ask one question
Who would you be if the world never gave you a label?
Never gave you a box to check
Would you be White? Black? Mexican?
Asian? Native American? Middle Eastern? Indian?
No. We would be one; we would be together
No longer living in the error
Of calling human beings Black people or White people
These labels that will forever blind us from seeing a person for who they are
But instead seeing them through the judgmental, prejudicial, artificial filters of who we THINK they are
And when you let an artificial label define yourself
Then, my friend, you have chosen smallness over greatness and minimized your…. self
Confined and divided your …..self from others
And it is an undeniable fact that
When there is division, there will be conflict
And conflict starts wars
Therefore every war has started over labels
It’s always us… versus them
So the answer to war, racism, sexism, and every other -ism
Is so simple that every politician has missed it
It’s the labels…
We must rip them off
Isn’t it funny how no baby is born racist
Yet, every baby cries when they hear the cries of another
No matter the gender, culture or color
Proving that deep down, we were meant to connect and care for each other
That is our mission, and that it’s not my opinion
That is the truth in a world that has sold us fiction
Please listen, labels only distort our vision
Which is why half of those watching this will dismiss it
Or feel resistance and conflicted
But, just remember…
So did the cater-pillar
Before it broke through its shell and became the magnificent butterfly
Well, these labels are our shells and we must do the same thing
So we can finally spread our wings
Human beings were not meant to be slapped with labels like groceries at supermarkets
DNA cannot be regulated by the FDA
We were meant to be free
And only until you remove them all
And stop living and thinking so small
Will we be free to see ourselves and each other for who we….TRULY…. are
Claudia says
Totally, deeply agree that race is a creation, it’s a label with the same importance as the color of the eyes – but* labels can be important to us, we actually need them at a point in time, they help us categorize the world and allow us to deepen our knowledge as we go about each category – even the shell of the caterpillar had its use, it its time – labels don’t create wars, it’s what is done with them that does
*there is always a “but” in any extreme position, even a very positive one
Peter says
Hi Claudia. Thanks for pointing out one of the “buts” in this argument. I agree that labels can be useful in the world in which we live. As you say, it makes it easier to categorise and organise everything, yet I wonder what life would be like if we never categorised anything. Maybe that would be nice too. It’s when the label becomes more important that the essence of life within all of us that I think we’ve gone too far and could be damaging ourselves.
Thanks for leaving your comments. They always make me stop and think, and help me to look at things differently.
Claudia says
Thanks for your reply Peter, its nice to keep a dialogue 🙂
I’ve found this relevant TEDx talk, maybe you’ve seen it, it’s really interesting: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5GCetbP7Fg