The beginning and the ending of a b&w week in Vienna; Maria Vlachou´s notes
I arrive in Vienna on a Friday night. The taxi driver´s face tells me that his country of origin might be somewhere in the Middle East. He doesn´t speak english, so we can´t talk. A few minutes later he answers a phone call. I hear him speaking turkish. “So, you are from Turkey?”, I ask, when he hangs up. He looks at me surprised through his mirror and asks me (probably): “You understand turkish?”. I tell him “Yunanistan” (Greece, in turkish). He looks at me even more surprised and says: “You?! Yunanistan?!”. And he continues in english: “Me, you, no problem, no problem!”. I smile: “No problem”, I tell him. When we arrive at the hotel, I thank him in turkish. He seems pleased.
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I am  in Vienna for a workshop on “Racism and Cultural awareness”, funded by  Grundtvig, the European Union programme for lifelong learning. The main  trainer is a black woman who seems to be dynamic and very  self-confident. The participants come from Bulgaria, Romania, the Czekh  Republic, Poland, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, UK, Spain and  Turkey. Black and white people – or kind of black and kind of white  -  many originating from countries other than the one they´re presently  residing in, people of different ages and backgrounds, gathered in  Vienna to discuss racism  
 We  are asked to talk about our expectations from this workshop. I tell them  I expect my views on racism to be challenged, my thinking to go a bit  further, because I know that none of us considers him/herself to be  racist, yet, we might be surprised.  
 Later  on, we´re given by the trainer a definition of racism: “Racism is  discrimination with power in a white dominated society.” I am not  comfortable with this definition.  
 -  “Do you see racism today as something that just white people do to black people?”, I ask.  -  “It´s not me saying it”, the trainer answers, “this is how it´s been defined.”  
 And  at that moment, with this kind of answer, I know that the week ahead of  us will be more complicated and less interesting than I had  anticipated. But challenging, nevertheless.   
 There are a number of reasons why this experience left me deeply concerned and disappointed, apart from uncomfortable.  
 First  of all, along the week, we were bombarded with statements (some,  actually, being serious historical inaccuracies), rarely, or rather  never, referring to any kind of bibliographic source and not supposed to  be further discussed: so, we were told that we should forget about the  ancient Greek philosophers and their contribution to european and world  culture, because they had been seen studying in Egypt (just this, “they  had been seen”); that Herodotus described Cleoparta as someone with  african traits (how did he do that, if he lived five centuries before  her?); that Alexander the Great burnt the library of Timbuktu (actually,  I think he went the other way); that doctors today are taking an oath  written by an egyptian doctor (mmm… would that be Hippocrates?).   
 Secondly,  there was a determination to hush anyone, white or black, who might  attempt to put racism into a contemporary, broader perspective. We were  either told that this was not the subject of the workshop or our  comments and questions were met with ironic laughs or agressive  responses, as our wish for debate was seen as an attempt to minimize the  seriousness of white racism against blacks in order to deal with our  “white guilt”. The arguments to support this kept coming. In a tour  around the city (called “Black Vienna” in the workshop programme), a  young black woman - living in Austria since the age of two and an  Austrian citizen today – shared her story of entering a play by Tennesse  Williams as the maid (typical role reserved for black actors, she  said). She felt uncomfortable with the use of the word “nigger” in  Williams´s text. She wanted it to be changed (Let´s see: she would be  happy to change a text written in the 50s and presenting a story in the  american south, where a white - probably racist - character wishing to  depreciate a black would maybe use the term ‘african american’ instead  of ‘nigger’? And maybe the maid should be interpreted by a white  actress? Seriously, is this the way to fight racism?). After this,  continuing our city tour, we were also taken to the city park, to be  shown the spot where a black youth was seriously beaten by the police  (presumably for being black), with the ambulance taking ages to come,  the attack resulting in the youth´s death (two weeks before a very  similar incident had taken place in Salonika, Greece, where the police  didn´t like much the “anarchist” looks of a – white – youth…).  
 An  apparent inability of the black community in Vienna to get organized in  order to pursue their rights and widely share their concerns with the  viennese society, was equally worrying and rather surprising too.
We  were told the story of Angelo Soliman, a black man who arrived in Vienna  in the 18th century, was greatly respected by the local  society and a companion to the emperor himself for his intelligence and  vast knowledge and even got married to a white woman… only to be  embalmed and displayed at the Natural History Museum after his death. An  exhibition about him at the Vienna Museum a few years ago was heavily  criticised by our city tour guide, for the way it was depicting african  people, but, apparently, there was no official reaction from the black  community (read about the exhibition here).  Later on, when we asked what kind of association they had to represent  them in the Austrian society and in their dealings with the Austrian  State, we were told that such kind of association was difficult, as the  biggest community comes from Nigeria and they belong to different, and  in the past rival,  tribes… How can it be that they are all one  (“black” or “african”) when attacked or discriminated, but tribes are  getting on the way when they should be getting organized?  
 Finally,  one more reason of concern: the obvious anger and equally obvious  inability (or lack of willingness) to put things in perspective. When  the case of Zimbabwe was referred, in what concerns the treatment white  farmers got from Mugabe´s government, we were told that this was  justice. Black people had always lived there, whereas white people  arrived much later, so, even if they are being born and raised on that  piece of land for decades now, they are not allowed to call it “home”…  On the other hand, young people who are officially today (black)  Austrians – after having lived in the country for a number of years -,  rage against austrian racism and discrimination. They are convinced (or  prefer to think, in order to continue nurturing their anger) that  whatever happens to black people is because they´re black.   
 I  am not denying this kind of racism – on the contrary, if I did, I  wouldn´t be there –, but in their repeated attempts to make us see a  black victim, some of us would just see a victim: a poor person, a  woman, a gay, a Roma… I was particularly impressed when a Senegalese  participant, living in Barcelona, told us that, when a Senegalese boy  was killed by Romas (shouting “kill the nigger”…), the community  refused to see this as a racial crime and concentrated on the crime  itself, the murder that had to be punished. It was a conscious choice to  avoid turning one community against the other. The murder was seen as a  murder.  
 And  I feel that this might be the way forward. Considering that there is  only one race, the human race, racism for me today can only have a  metaphorical sense. It is discrimination with power (regardless of the  colour of the discriminated or the powerful). In an interview with Mike  Wallace, Morgan Freeman considered Black History Month to be  “ridiculous”, refusing to see his history resumed in a month. When asked  “So, how are we gonna get rid of racism”, he simply answered: “Stop  talking about it. I´ll stop calling you a white man and you stop calling  me a black man. I am Morgan Freeman to you and you´re Mike Wallace to me.” 
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By the end of the week, waiting for our flights at the airport – four of us, blacks and whites of different origins – we discuss travelling and eventually low cost companies and their services. One of us, black, shares the story of her aunt, who was coming to Europe with Easyjet, and was told to wait somewhere for the check-in, being on purpose “forgotten” and having to purchase another ticket. “This is what they do to Africans, you see.”
Maria Vlachou
