Pubdate: Wed, 07 Jun 2006 Source: Peoria Journal Star (IL) Copyright: 2006sPeoria Journal Star Contact: http://pjstar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/338 Note: Does not publish letters from outside our circulation area. Author: Pam Adams Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) MURDERS RECALL SAD TIME IN HISTORY Larry Bright could date black women and still be a racist. He could watch black women in pornographic movies and still be a racist. We don't know, but he could be. To truly understand the dynamics of racism is to understand that racism U.S.-style is fraught with violence and sexual perversion. They didn't have to castrate black men when they lynched them. But they did. We do know Larry Bright finally got his wish last week. He pleaded guilty to killing eight women in a deal that puts him in prison for life. Bright is white. All of his victims were black. Repeatedly, we have been told, authorities don't believe race motivated Bright's killing spree. But that is to misjudge the power racism holds on the national psyche. The families of the victims, and the communities that supported them most, set a standard for grace and restraint under circumstances that could have been rife with racially tinged revenge fantasies. Their reactions to Bright's deal to trade the death penalty for a lifetime sentence stand in stark contrast to many police officers' disappointment when Jarvis Neely received a life sentence, instead of death, for the murder of Peoria Police Officer Jim Faulkner. From the beginning, drug use trumped all in the hellish time Bright roamed the streets, killing women, burning some of their bodies, then crushing the bones. The one something every woman shared was a history of drug abuse. The one something Bright shared with them was a history of drug abuse. But white women use drugs, also. White women trade sex for drugs. As central Illinoisans know all too well, serial killers kill white women, too. But Bright didn't confess to murdering white women and burning their bodies in his mother's back yard. Not that he should have murdered white women, too, but it would have been much simpler to draw conclusions about the non-racial nature of his motives had the list of victims been a little more racially integrated. Bright could have sought out black women because he was steeped in any number of racial-sexual stereotypes that still haunt the culture. We don't know. But we do know Bright jaywalked racial boundaries in ways unusual and unexplored for a serial killer. Just as certain stereotypes about black men's sexual prowess refuse to die, certain stereotypes about black women and their sexuality haunt the cultural underworld. A common misperception is that black women are more available, less inhibited, more savage, even when black prostitutes are compared to white prostitutes. Another deals in complicated areas of comparisons, contrasts and values. White womanhood represents something too pure, too chaste, too worthy to subject to compromising, denigrating positions. But black women represent the opposite; therefore, predators are justified in using them up, burning them, throwing them away. The culmination of Larry Bright's case calls for a short black history lesson. For much of this country's history, dating, marriage and sex between the races were illegal in most states, taboo everywhere. Except when a white man chose to take a black woman, by force or otherwise. Historically, black women could not cry rape and expect to be heard. Black women were supposed to be there for the taking. White women, on the other hand, were off limits to black men. Whether Bright realizes it, his journey to hell helped dredge up deeply ingrained cultural memories about the worth of black life in the past - and newly formed hurts and fears about the worth of black life today. That is partly why, before Bright's arrest, 400 to 500 people showed up at two unprecedented town hall forums demanding that authorities find the killer. They called on the rest of us to see the victims as real women, loved and valued every bit as much as a Nicole Simpson or Natalee Holloway. A coalition of social service agencies responded also, creating Rahab's Window, a refuge at the South Side Mission for women on the street who believe they are in danger late at night. City of Refuge Worship Center, the church that helped organize the town hall meetings, created a special center, scheduled to open later this month, to help women and men reclaim their lives from substance abuse and incarceration. Larry Bright's life sentence should not be the final chapter in his life - or in his victims' deaths. We cannot change what we don't remember. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman