Racism, cycles of trauma and the importance of mental health

"We didn't just come to this place where Black and brown people are disproportionately likely to live in resource deprived environments. It is racism."—Dr. Tiffany Green, Associate Professor, UW-Madison School of Medicine and PUblic Health Population Health Sciences and Obstetrics and Gynecology

Episode  |  Related Video  |  Transcript

Racism, cycles of trauma and the importance of mental health

Clip: S1 Ep4 | 6m 08s

Generational trauma continues to harm the mental health of Black children and adults in Wisconsin, but advocates and religious leaders seek to help communities with empowerment and expressions of joy.

FacebookRedditGoogle ClassroomEmail

Related Clips:

TRANSCRIPT

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
If I’m talking about it and I’m not embarrassed about it, then you don’t have to be embarrassed either. The mental health of so many people, you know, myself included, are just being, I mean, it feels like you’re just being constantly attacked.

Nathan Denzin:
Reverend Everett Mitchell is a pastor at Christ the Solid Rock Baptist Church in Madison, and also a Dane County judge.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
I don’t know what it is, but people are feeling darker now.

Dr. Jasmine Zapata:
Mental health is so, so extremely important, especially in the aftermath of COVID.

Nathan Denzin:
Dr. Jasmine Zapata is the chief medical officer for community health at the Wisconsin Department of Health Services.

Dr. Jasmine Zapata:
Younger people, and in particular our Black youth, where we see increases in overdoses, mental health concerns, adverse childhood experiences.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
I grew up, there was a lot of trauma, but nobody talked about it. There was a lot of pain; nobody expressed it. We saw cycles of people, you know, alcoholism and drug abuse, just kind of going through the same cycles.

Nathan Denzin:
Repeating cycles in families that go way back. For Lilada Gee, many of the mental health issues facing the Black community today can be attributed to the generational trauma they hold.

Lilada Gee:
I think there is not a Black American that is not touched by generational trauma.

Nathan Denzin:
Gee is the founder of Defending Black Girlhood, a nonprofit that works with Black girls and women to unpack and heal their trauma. As part of that work, she creates art depicting resiliency. She is also a lecturer at the Madison-based Nehemiah’s Justified Anger: Black History for a New Day course. The nine-week course teaches the community about race, history, and justice.

Lilada Gee:
In the way I would define it is something has happened to an ancestor that was so devastating that the impact reverberates to today.

Nathan Denzin:
Even if you aren’t aware of the trauma you carry, Reggie Jackson says it can affect your life.

Reggie Jackson:
It teaches you to see yourself in a very specific way. It teaches you that somehow, you can’t think of yourself in a positive way.

Nathan Denzin:
Jackson is a community leader in Milwaukee.

Reggie Jackson:
You are going to be told by society, generation after generation, even after slavery ends, that you are an inferior species, that you are not deserving of being treated as a first-class citizen in America.

Lilada Gee:
If you don’t have the experience to be able to heal, then that trauma remains there. It passes down in terms of the way that you interact with your family members, your children, your grandchildren, your great-grandchildren. All of those things are impacted by the people that came before you.

Nathan Denzin:
Generations of people being treated as second-class citizens, often expressed by what are known as microaggressions.

Lilada Gee:
Microaggressions from my definition, are these small, insidious experiences that happen on a regular basis.

Nathan Denzin:
Some are small and insidious; others are overt, and they can happen in every facet of life, like trying to schedule appointments.

Lilada Gee:
The lady I’m talking to, she puts her hand over the phone and says to somebody in the background, “I don’t mean to be racist, but I think I’m talking to an angry Black woman here.”

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
We thank you, God, for all these blessings…

Nathan Denzin:
At Christ the Solid Rock, Mitchell says the trauma his parishioners carry is always on his mind.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
I prioritize not only education about the faith, but also your mental health, mental well-being as a spiritual priority.

Nathan Denzin:
While church attendance is declining, nearly 70% of Black Americans still go to church at least once a month.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
The Black church is essential because it speaks to the issues that people experience.

Nathan Denzin:
The Black church has been part of American life before America was even founded. The first Black church was founded in 1773 during slavery.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
In many ways, the Black church is a response to the, you know, the brutality of slavery in our American history.

Nathan Denzin:
Mitchell says the Black church differs from most white churches because they often talk about religious practicality.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
What you experience on the outside of the world should be brought in here so we can better understand how we deal with it, how we talk about it.

Nathan Denzin:
To help his congregation through the trauma they may have, Mitchell gives a five-week sermon every year to help define and heal from trauma and resulting problems with mental health.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
You don’t have to pray it away. It is something we identify and we live with, and it’s the living with it that gives us the courage to be able to transform it into something that can be useful for us and for our families that we serve.

Nathan Denzin:
He says the sermons have had a tremendous impact on his congregation.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
But it’s something within us.

That in and of itself has given people permission to move in and out of the space of trauma without thinking that this is something that they need to get rid of or that one sermon or one prayer is gonna just release it.

Nathan Denzin:
For Lilada Gee, the most important healing work is with Black women.

Lilada Gee:
It’s hard for the Black community to move forward if Black women are not healed, and if Black women are not healed, then they continue to pass that pain on to generation to generation.

Nathan Denzin:
But she says that healing is possible if you’re willing to put in the work and lean into joy.

Lilada Gee:
Joy is something that you feel, you just get to feel when you lean in, and comes from gratitude, and it comes from hope and the belief that your life can be better.

Hon. Rev. Everett Mitchell:
Our messages have to become brighter, and the only way that we can do that is to give people a demonstrated experience in our local community to offset all of the crazy stuff that they’re hearing about.

Lilada Gee:
The trauma that we’ve experienced is not something we have to carry for a lifetime.

Nathan Denzin:
For Here & Now, I’m Nathan Denzin.

Read More