Christian Cooper Shares Joys and Challenges of Birding While Black I NOVA I PBS
Z-RQYQU6zMc • 2020-09-04
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Kind: captions Language: en [Music] birds don't care what color you are and the thing i always say is that the birds belong to all of us no matter what color you are no matter what your sexual orientation is no matter what your gender identity is the birds belong to all of us they use the same primary senses as we do their eyes and their ears so that's why we find them so spectacularly beautiful why we can enjoy their songs but also there's the romance of birds because they can fly and that just symbolizes the ultimate in freedom when i'm out in the field and i have my binoculars a lot of times i feel like i'm particularly suspect that someone thinks i'm up to no good there are places where i would love to see the birds because they're great birding spots but i hesitate to go there because i again am afraid of the reception i will receive as a black man as a gay man as a man who is not a christian [Music] in central park i was birding in the ramble the ramble is a protected area because there's so much wildlife there and dogs and the ramblers supposed to be on the leash at all times and ended up in a verbal conflict with the woman whose dog was off the leash and i was pretty adamant that i was going to record until the dog was on the leash and she didn't like that so she said if you don't stop recording me i'm going to call the police and tell them an african-american man is threatening my life this is a woman who used the politically correct term and she still went to that dark place and tried to tap into an expectation that if the police heard african-american man threatening my life they would come whistling down on my head with special vengeance she was tapping into this deep vein of racial bias it is not new it is centuries old that leads to people getting dead um that's how george floyd died because a guy was black this white cop decided it was okay for him to keep his knee on his neck for eight minutes and 46 seconds until he was dead it's what led some white suburban homeowners to chase down a man going for a jog and shoot him dead and then say it was self-defense i don't think there's a black person in america alive who hasn't encountered racial bias at some point in their lives burning alone your suspect if someone's going to be shot as a potential prowler with a gun in the ramble it's not going to be a white person doing exactly the same thing under exactly the same circumstances it's going to be me so uh that's always in the back of my head i've been trying to get kids in underserved areas um exposed to birding and birds and the outdoors because a lot of these kids they don't think that that's accessible to them and i like to get them out there and show them hey look this is yours too and it's here in your backyard so you can broaden the inclusion uh reaching out to kids and then the kids bring the families i think the most important thing is make them feel welcome make sure they know that they belong here we all have to have a hand in fixing because black people can't fix this we can't do it it's not something we can fix it's something that white people have to face up to and address and try to fix and hopefully it looks like at this moment in history maybe that's happening maybe we're finally starting to address that i hope so we're not going to solve it i'm not that naive but maybe we can make some progress and that would be [Music] awesome [Music] you
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