╌>

'There's no need for us to ask why. We know why.' Racism. - Chicago Sun-Times

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  john-russell  •  2 years ago  •  3 comments

By:   Chicago Sun-Times

'There's no need for us to ask why. We know why.' Racism. - Chicago Sun-Times
Guards allowed Ukrainians to cross but blocked foreigners.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T


In-depth political coverage, sports analysis, entertainment reviews and cultural commentary.

Their tales of being forced to wait in lines for hours and days in the freezing cold, without food and water, and subjected to violence, have been widely reported by the media.

Rachel Onyegbule, a Nigerian first-year medical student living in Ukraine, said she and other foreigners were forced off a public bus at a checkpoint between the Ukraine and Poland border.

They were ordered to stand aside as the bus drove off with only Ukrainian nationals on board, she told CNN last week in a phone interview. Onyegbule was left stranded at the border town of Shehyni.

"More than 10 buses came, and we were watching everyone leave," CNN quoted Onyegbule as saying. "We thought after they took all the Ukrainians they would take us, but they told us we had to walk, that there were no more buses and told us to walk."

She was "numb from the cold, and we haven't slept in about four days now." She added: "There's no need for us to ask why. We know why."

Racism.

Chineye Mbagwu, a 24-year-old Nigerian doctor who was living in western Ukraine, said she spent more than two days stranded at a Poland-Ukraine border crossing.

The guards there allowed Ukrainians to cross but blocked foreigners, she told the New York Times. "The Ukrainian border guards were not letting us through," she said in a phone interview.

"They were beating people up with sticks" and tearing off their jackets, she added. "They would slap them, beat them and push them to the end of the queue. It was awful."

Ahmed Habboubi, a 22-year-old French-Tunisian medical student, told the newspaper, "the Ukrainian army beat me up so much I couldn't properly walk. When I finally managed to enter Poland, the Polish authorities took me straight to the hospital.

"It was absolute chaos. We were treated like animals."

Authorities in Poland and Ukraine have denied any discrimination or abuse. And many thousands of refugees are being helped across the border to safety every day in this humanitarian crisis.

Yet in the face of this horrific world disaster, at a time when we should be praying for peace in Ukraine, some are ready to oppress people who look different from them. Ukrainians first. White people first. People of color, get in line. It is not your turn, perhaps never your turn.

What does it say about our humanity if a group of people are denied safety and harbor in a humanitarian crisis? Inhumanity is the child of racism.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is the criminal in charge of this heinous attack on Ukraine, a nation that is choosing democracy and peace over oppression and war.

Opinion Newsletter

Opinion This Week


A weekly overview of opinions, analysis and commentary on issues affecting Chicago, Illinois and our nation by outside contributors, Sun-Times readers and the CST Editorial Board. Subscribe

Yet anyone who denies desperate human beings safety at the border because of their race is no better than Putin.

Listen to the prescience of W.E.B. Du Bois, the great thinker and human rights activist. He declared in July 1900: "The problem of the twentieth century is the problem of the color line, the question as to how far differences of race-which show themselves chiefly in the color of the skin and the texture of the hair — will hereafter be made the basis of denying to over half the world the right of sharing to utmost ability the opportunities and privileges of modern civilization."

Well into the 21st century, little has changed.

Send letters to letters@suntimes.com.

Next Up In Commentary Biden's Russian oil ban will be painful, but necessaryCPS parents, if you haven't done so yet —please get your children vaccinatedA bleak International Women's Day in Ukraine is cause to worry about what lies aheadA union for Chicago school principals sets the stage for more labor strifeRoosevelt's way in 1905 shows way to end war in Ukraine in 2022'Why don't we DO something?'


Tags

jrDiscussion - desc
[]
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    2 years ago
Yet in the face of this horrific world disaster, at a time when we should be praying for peace in Ukraine, some are ready to oppress people who look different from them. Ukrainians first. White people first. People of color, get in line. It is not your turn, perhaps never your turn. What does it say about our humanity if a group of people are denied safety and harbor in a humanitarian crisis? Inhumanity is the child of racism.
 
 
 
Ronin2
Professor Quiet
2  Ronin2    2 years ago

What, you mean it isn't only Americans that are racist? (Gasp, shock, who would have ever thought it!)

Guess the world is getting a taste of those so called Democracies that were allowed to join NATO and the EU. 

Ukraine, a nation that is choosing democracy and peace over oppression and war.

Got a really good laugh over this one. Ukraine is not a democracy despite what the world is calling it. Democracies don't imprison political opponents; shut down media because they don't like what they have to say; and don't support far right wing Fascist and Nazi militias. They also don't roll the largest of those militias into their military.

Ukraine is a democracy because a war between two fascist thugs doesn't have the same ring to it. It is hard to get behind either side. The Russian fascists thugs are meaner and more oppressive than the Ukrainian fascist thugs- so we have to support the Ukrainians! Doesn't roll of the tongue does it? 

Maybe this will force NATO and the EU to really take a hard look at the countries they have let in.

 
 
 
Drinker of the Wry
Senior Expert
2.1  Drinker of the Wry  replied to  Ronin2 @2    2 years ago
Maybe this will force NATO and the EU to really take a hard look at the countries they have let in.

Which ones should they start with?

 
 

Who is online