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BY TA-NEHISI COATES
Between the World and Me
The Beautiful Struggle
Between the World and Me
Son,
Last Sunday the host of a popular news show asked me
what it meant to lose my body. The host was broadcasting
from Washington, D.C., and I was seated in a remote stu-
dio on the far west side of Manhattan. A satellite closed
the miles between us, but no machinery could close the
gap between her world and the world for which I had
been summoned to speak. When the host asked me about
my body, her face faded from the screen, and was replaced
by a scroll of words, written by me earlier that week.
The host read these words for the audience, and when
she finished she turned to the subject of my body, al-
though she did not mention it specifically. But by now I
am accustomed to intelligent people asking about the
condition of my body without realizing the nature of their
request. Specifically, the host wished to know why I felt
6 TA-NEHISI COATES
that white America's progress, or rather the progress of
those Americans who believe that they are white, was built
on looting and violence. Hearing this, I felt an old and
indistinct sadness well up in me.- The answer to this ques-
tion is the record of the believers themselves. The answer is American hist01y
There is nothing extreme in this statement. Americans
deity democracy in a way that allows for a dim awareness
that they have, from time to time, stood in defiance of
their God. But democracy is a forgiving God and Amer-
ica's heresies-torture, theft, enslavement-are so common
among individuals and nations that none can declare them-
selves immune. In fact, Americans, in a real sense, have
never betrayed their God. When Abraham Lincoln de-
clared, in 1863, that the battle of Gettysburg must ensure
"that government of the people, by the people, for the
people, shall not perish from the earth," he was not merely
being aspirational; at the onset of the Civil War, the United
States of America had one of the highest rates of suffrage
in the world. The question is not whether Lincoln truly
meant "government of the people" but what our country
has, throughout its history, taken the political term "peo-
ple" to actually mean. In 1863 it did not mean your mother
or your grandmother, and it did not mean you and me.
Thus America's problem is not its betrayal of "government
of the people," but the means by which "the people" ac- quired their names.
This leads us to another equally important ideal, one
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 7
that Americans implicitly accept but to which they make
no conscious claim. Americans believe in the reality of
"race" as a defined, indubitable feature of the natural
world. Racism-the need to ascribe bone-deep features to
people and then humiliate, reduce, and destroy them-
inevitably follows from this inalterable condition. In this
way, racism is rendered as the innocent daughter of Mother
Nature, and one is left to deplore the Middle Passage or
the Trail of Tears the way one deplores an earthquake, a
tornado, or any other phenomenon that can be cast as be-
yond the handiwork of men.
But race is the child of racism, not the father. And the
process of naming "the people" has never been a matter of
genealogy and physiognomy so much as one of hierarchy.
Difference in hue and hair is old. But the belief in the pre-
eminence ofhue and hair, the notion that these factors can
correctly organize a society and that they signifY deeper
attributes, which are indelible-this is the new idea at the
heart of these new people who have been brought up hope-
lessly, tragically, deceitfully, to believe that they are white.
These new people are, like us, a modern invention. But
unlike us, their new name has no real meaning divorced
from the machinery of criminal power. The new people
were something else before they were white-Catholic,
Corsican, Welsh, Mennonite, Jewish-and if all our na-
tional hopes have any fulfillment, then they will have to be
something else again. Perhaps they will truly become
American and create a nobler basis for their myths. I can-
8 TA-NEHISI COATES
not call it. As for now, it must be said that the process of
washing the disparate tribes white, the elevation of the
belief in being white, was not achieved through wine tast-
ings and ice cream socials, but rath"er through the pillaging
oflife, liberty, labor, and land; through the flaying of backs;
the chaining of limbs; the strangling of dissidents; the de-
struction of families; the rape of mothers; the sale of chil-
dren; and various other acts meant, first and foremost, to
deny you and me the right to secure and govern our own bodies.
The new people are not original in this. Perhaps there
has been, at some point in history, some great power whose
elevation was exempt from the violent exploitation of
other human bodies. If there has been, I have yet to dis-
cover it. But this banality of violence can never excuse
America, because America makes no claim to the banal.
America believes itself exceptional, the greatest and no-
blest nation ever to exist, a lone champion standing be-
tween the white city of democracy and the terrorists,
despots, barbarians, and other enemies of civilization. One
cannot, at once, claim to be superhuman and then plead
mortal error. I propose to take our countrymen's claims of
American exceptionalism seriously, which is to say I pro-
pose subjecting our country to an exceptional moral stan-
dard. This is difficult because there exists, all around us, an
apparatus urging us to accept American innocence at face
value and not to inquire too much. And it is so easy to
look away, to live with the fruits of our history and to ig-
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 9
nore the great evil done in all of our names. But you and I
have never truly had that luxury. I think you know.
I write you in your fifteenth year. I am writing you be-
cause this was the year you saw Eric Garner choked to
death for selling cigarettes; because you know now that
Renisha McBride was shot for seeking help, that John
Crawford was shot down for browsing in a department
store. And you have seen men in uniform drive by and
murder Tamir Rice, a twelve-year-old child whom they
were oath-bound to protect. And you have seen men in
the same uniforms pummel Marlene Pinnock, someone's
grandmother, on the side of a road. And you know now, if
you did not before, that the police departments of your
country have been endowed with the authority to destroy
your body. It does not matter if the destruction is the result
of an unfortunate overreaction. It does not matter if it
originates in a misunderstanding. It does not matter if the
destruction springs from a foolish policy. Sell cigarettes
without the proper authority and your body can be de-
stroyed. Resent the people trying to entrap your body and
it can be destroyed. Turn into a dark stairwell and your
body can be destroyed. The destroyers will rarely be held
accountable. Mostly they will receive pensions. And de-
struction is merely the superlative form of a dominion
whose prerogatives include friskings, detainings, beatings,
and humiliations. All of this is common to black people.
And all of this is old for black people. No one is held re-
sponsible.
10 TA-NEHISI COATES
There is nothing uniquely evil in these destroyers or
even in this moment. The destroyers are merely men en-
forcing the whims of our country, correctly interpreting
its heritage and legacy. It is hard to face this. But all our
phrasing-race relations, racial chasm, racial justice, racial
profiling, white privilege, even white supremacy-serves
to obscure that racism is a visceral experience, that it dis-
lodges brains, blocks airways, rips muscle, extracts organs,
cracks bones, breaks teeth. You must never look away from
this. You must always remember that the sociology, the
history, the economics, the graphs, the charts, the regres-
sions all land, with great violence, upon the body.
That Sunday, with that host, on that news show, I tried
to explain this as best I could within the time allotted. But
at the end of the segment, the host flashed a widely shared
picture of an eleven-year-old black boy tearfully hugging
a white police officer. Then she asked me about "hope."
And I knew then that I had failed. And I remembered that
I had expected to fail. And I wondered again at the indis-
tinct sadness welling up in me. Why exactly was I sad? I
came out of the studio and walked for a while. It was a
calm December day. Families, believing themselves white,
were out on the streets. Infants, raised to be white, were
bundled in strollers. And I was sad for these people, much
as I was sad for the host and sad for all the people out there
watching and reveling in a specious hope. I realized then
why I was sad. When the journalist asked me about my
body, it was like she was asking me to awaken her from the
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 11
most gorgeous dream. I have seen that dream all my life. It
is perfect houses with nice lawns. It is Memorial Day
cookouts, block associations, and driveways. The Dream is
treehouses and the Cub Scouts. The Dream smells like
peppermint but tastes like strawberry shortcake. And for
so long I have wanted to escape into the Dream, to fold
my country over my head like a blanket. But this has never
been an option because the Dream rests on our backs, the
bedding made from our bodies. And knowing this, know-
ing that the Dream persists by warring with the known
world, I was sad for the host, I was sad for all those families,
I was sad for my country, but above all, in that moment, I
was sad for you.
That was the week you learned that the killers of Mi-
chael Brown would go free. The men who had left his
body in the street like some awesome declaration of their
inviolable power would never be punished. It was not my
expectation that anyone would ever be punished. But you
were young and still believed. You stayed up till 11 P.M.
that night, waiting for the announcement of an indict-
ment and when instead it was announced that there was , none you said, "I've got to go," and you went into your
room, and I heard you crying. I came in five minutes after,
and I didn't hug you, and I didn't comfort you, because I
thought it would be wrong to comfort you. I did not tell
you that it would be okay, because I have never believed it
would be okay. What I told you is what your grandparents
tried to tell me: that this is your country, that this is your
12 TA-NEHISI COATES
world, that this is your body, and you must find some way
to live within the all of it. I tell you now that the question
of how one should live within a black body, within a
country lost in the Dream, is the question of my life, and
the pursuit of this question, I have found, ultimately an-' swers itself.
This must seem strange to you. We live in a "goal-
oriented" era. Our media vocabulary is full of hot takes,
big ideas, and grand theories of everything. But some time
ago I rejected magic in all its forms. This rejection was a
gift from your grandparents, who never tried to console
me with ideas of an afterlife and were skeptical of preor-
dained American glory. In accepting both the chaos ofhis-
tory and the fact of my total end, I was freed to truly
consider how I wished to live-specifically, how do I live
free in this black body? It is a profound question because
America understands itself as God's handiwork, but the
black body is the clearest evidence that America is the
work of men. I have asked the question through my read-
ing and writings, through the music of my youth, through
arguments with your grandfather, with your mother, your
aunt Janai, your uncle Ben. I have searched for answers in
nationalist myth, in classrooms, out on the streets, and on
other continents. The question is unanswerable, which is
not to say futile. The greatest reward of this constant inter-
rogation, of confrontation with the brutality of my coun-
try, is that it has freed me from ghosts and girded me against the sheer terror of disembodiment.
14 TA-NEHISI COATES
And I am afraid. I feel the fear most acutely whenever
you leave me. But I was afraid long before you, and in this
I was unoriginal. When I was your age the only people I
knew were black, and all of them were powerfully, ada-
mantly; dangerously afraid. I had seen this fear all my young
life, though I had not always recognized it as such.
It was always right in front of me: The fear was there in
the extravagant boys of my neighborhood, in their large
rings and medallions, their big putty coats and full-length
fur-collared leathers, which was their armor against their
world. They would stand on the corner of Gwynn Oak
and Liberty; or Cold Spring and Park Heights, or outside
Mondawmin Mall, with their hands dipped in Russell
sweats. I think back on those boys now and all I see is fear,
and all I see is them girding themselves against the ghosts
of the bad old days when the Mississippi mob gathered
'round their grandfathers so that the branches of the black
body might be torched, then cut away. The fear lived on
in their practiced bop, their slouching denim, their big
T-shirts, the calculated angle of their baseball caps, a cata-
log ofbehaviors and garments enlisted to inspire the belief
that these boys were in firm possession of everything they desired.
I saw it in their customs of war. I was no older than five ' sitting out on the front steps of my home on Woodbrook
Avenue, watching two shirtless boys circle each other close
and buck shoulders. From then on, I knew that there was
a ritual to a street fight, bylaws and codes that, in their very
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 15
need, attested to all the vulnerability of the black teenage
bodies.
I heard the fear in the first music I ever knew, the music
that pumped from boom boxes full of grand boast and
bluster. The boys who stood out on Garrison and Liberty
up on Park Heights loved this music because it told them,
against all evidence and odds, that they were masters of
their own lives, their own streets, and their own bodies. I
saw it in the girls, in their loud laughter, in their gilded
bamboo earrings that announced their names thrice over.
And I saw it in their brutal language and hard gaze, how
they would cut you with their eyes and destroy you with
their words for the sin of playing too much. "Keep my
name out your mouth," they would say. I would watch
them after school, how they squared off like boxers, vas-
elined up, earrings off, Reeboks on, and leaped at each
other.
I felt the fear in the visits to my Nana's home in Phila-
delphia. You never knew her. I barely knew her, but what
I remember is her hard manner, her rough voice. And I
knew that my father's father was dead and that my uncle
Oscar was dead and that my uncle David was dead and
that each of these instances was unnatural. And I saw it in
my own father, who loves you, who counsels you, who
slipped me money to care for you. My father was so very
afraid. I felt it in the sting of his black leather belt, which
he applied with more anxiety than anger, my father who
beat me as if someone might steal me away, because that is
16 TA-NEHISI COATES
exactly what was happening all around us. Everyone had
lost a child, somehow, to the streets, to jail, to drugs, to
guns. It was said that these lost girls were sweet as honey
and would not hurt a fly. It was said that these lost boys had
just received a GED and had begun to turn their lives
around. And now they were gone, and their legacy was a great fear.
Have they told you this story? When your grandmother
was sixteen years old a young man knocked on her door.
The young man was your Nana Jo's boyfriend. No one
else was home. Ma allowed this young man to sit and wait
until your Nana Jo returned. But your great-grandmother
got there first. She asked the young man to leave. Then
she beat your grandmother terrifically, one last time, so
that she might remember how easily she could lose her
body. Ma never forgot. I remember her clutching my small
hand tightly as we crossed the street. She would tell me
that ifi ever let go and were killed by an onrushing car, she
would beat me back to life. When I was six, Ma and Dad
took me to a local park. I slipped from their gaze and
found a playground. Your grandparents spent anxious
minutes looking for me. When they found me, Dad did
what every parent I knew would have done-he reached
for his belt. I remember watching him in a kind of daze,
awed at the distance between punishment and offense.
Later, I would hear it in Dad's voice-"Either I can beat
him, or the police." Maybe that saved me. Maybe it didn't.
All I know is, the violence rose from the fear like smoke
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 17
from a fire, and I cannot say whether that violence, even
administered in fear and love, sounded the alarm or choked
us at the exit. What I know is that fathers who slammed
their teenage boys for sass would then release them to
streets where their boys employed, and were subject to, the
same justice. And I knew mothers who belted their girls,
but the belt could not save these girls from drug dealers
twice their age. We, the children, employed our darkest
humor to cope. We stood in the alley where we shot bas-
ketballs through hollowed crates and cracked jokes on the
boy whose mother wore him out with a beating in front
of his entire fifth-grade class. We sat on the number five
bus, headed downtown, laughing at some girl whose
mother was known to reach for anything-cable wires,
extension cords, pots, pans. We were laughing, but I know
that we were afraid of those who loved us most. Our par-
ents resorted to the lash the way flagellants in the plague
years resorted to the scourge.
To be black in the Baltimore of my youth was to be
naked before the elements of the world, before all the
guns, fists, knives, crack, rape, and disease. The nakedness
is not an error, nor pathology. The nakedness is the cor-
rect and intended result of policy, the predictable upshot
of people forced for centuries to live under fear. The law
did not protect us. And now, in your time, the law has be-
come an excuse for stopping and frisking you, which is to
say, for furthering the assault on your body. But a society
that protects some people through a safety net of schools,
18 TA-NEHJSJ COATES
government-backed home loans, and ancestral wealth but
can only protect you with the club of criminal justice has
either failed at enforcing its good intentions or has suc-
ceeded at something much darker. However you call it,
the result was our infirmity before the criminal forces of
the world. It does not matter if the agent of those forces is
white or black-what matters is our condition, what mat-
ters is the system that makes your body breakable.
The revelation of these forces, a series of great changes,
has unfolded over the course of my life. The changes are
still unfolding and will likely continue until I die. I was
eleven years old, standing out in the parking lot in front of
the 7 -Eleven, watching a crew of older boys standing near
the street. They yelled and gestured at ... who? ... another
boy, young, like me, who stood there, almost smiling,
gamely throwing up his hands. He had already learned the
lesson he would teach me that day: that his body was in
constant jeopardy. Who knows what brought him to that
knowledge? The projects, a drunken stepfather, an older
brother concussed by police, a cousin pinned in the city
jail. That he was outnumbered did not matter because the
whole world had outnumbered him long ago, and what do
numbers matter? This was a war for the possession of his
body and that would be the war of his whole life.
I stood there for some seconds, marveling at the older
boys' beautiful sense of fashion. They all wore ski jackets,
the kind which, in my day, mothers put on layaway in Sep-
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 19
tember, then piled up overtime hours so as to have the
thing wrapped and ready for Christmas. I focused in on a
light-skinned boy with a long head and small eyes. He was
scowling at another boy, who was standing close to me. It
was just before three in the afternoon. I was in sixth grade.
School had just let out, and it was not yet the fighting
weather of early spring. What was the exact problem here?
Who could know?
The boy with the small eyes reached into his ski jacket
and pulled out a gun. I recall it in the slowest motion, as
though in a dream. There the boy stood, with the gun
brandished, which he slowly untucked, tucked, then un-
tucked once more, and in his small eyes I saw a surging
rage that could, in an instant, erase my body. That was
1986. That year I felt myself to be drowning in the news
reports of murder. I was aware that these murders very
often did not land upon the intended targets but fell upon
great-aunts, PTA mothers, overtime uncles, and joyful
children-fell upon them random and relentless, like great
sheets of rain. I knew this in theory but could not under-
stand it as fact until the boy with the small eyes stood
across from me holding my entire body in his small hands.
The boy did not shoot. His friends pulled him back. He
did not need to shoot. He had affirmed my place in the
order of things. He had let it be known how easily I could
be selected. I took the subway home that day, processing
the episode all alone. I did not tell my parents. I did not tell
20 TA-NEHISI COATES
my teachers, and ifi told my friends I would have done so
with all the excitement needed to obscure the fear that came over me in that moment.
I remember being amazed that death could so easily rise
up from the nothing of a boyish afternoon, billow up like
fog. I knew that West Baltimore, where I lived; that the
north side of Philadelphia, where my cousins lived; that
the South Side of Chicago, where friends of my father
lived, comprised a world apart. Somewhere out there be-
yond the firmament, past the asteroid belt, there were
other worlds where children did not regularly fear for
their bodies. I knew this because there was a large televi-
sion resting in my living room. In the evenings I would sit
before this television bearing witness to the dispatches
from this other world. There were little white boys with
complete collections of football cards, and their only want
was a popular girlfriend and their only worry was poison
oak. That other world was suburban and endless, organized
around pot roasts, blueberry pies, fireworks, ice cream sun-
daes, immaculate bathrooms, and small toy trucks that
were loosed in wooded backyards with streams and glens.
Comparing these dispatches with the facts of my native
world, I came to understand that my country was a galaxy,
and this galaxy stretched from the pandemonium ofWest
Baltimore to the happy hunting grounds of Mr. Belvedere. I
obsessed over the distance between that other sector of
space and my own. I knew that my portion of the Ameri-
can galaxy, where bodies were enslaved by a tenacious
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 21
gravity, was black and that the other, liberated portion was
not. I knew that some inscrutable energy preserved the
breach. I felt, but did not yet understand, the relation be-
tween that other world and me. And I felt in this a cosmic
injustice, a profound cruelty, which infused an abiding, ir-
repressible desire to unshackle my body and achieve the
velocity of escape.
Do you ever feel that same need? Your life is so very
different from my own. The grandness of the world, the
real world, the whole world, is a known thing for you.
And you have no need of dispatches because you have
seeri so much of the American galaxy and its inhabitants-
their homes, their hobbies-up close. I don't know what it
means to grow up with a black president, social networks,
omnipresent media, and black women everywhere in their
natural hair. What I know is that when they loosed the
killer of Michael Brown, you said, "I've got to go." And
that cut me because, for all our differing worlds, at your
age my feeling was exactly the same. And I recall that even
then I had not yet begun to imagine the perils that tangle
us. You still believe the injustice was Michael Brown. You
have not yet grappled with your own myths and narratives
and discovered the plunder everywhere around us.
Before I could discover, before I could escape, I had to
survive, and this could only mean a clash with the streets,
by which I mean not just physical blocks, nor simply the
people packed into them, but the array of lethal puzzles
and strange perils that seem to rise up from the asphalt it-
22 TA-NEHISI COATES
self. The streets transform every ordinary day into a series
of trick questions, and every incorrect answer risks a beat-
down, a shooting, or a pregnancy. No one survives un-
scathed. And yet the heat that springs from the constant
danger, from a lifestyle of near-death experience, is thrill-
ing. This is what the rappers mean when they pronounce
themselves addicted to "the streets" or in love with "the
game." I imagine they feel something akin to parachutists,
rock climbers, BASE jumpers, and others who choose to
live on the edge. Of course we chose nothing. And I have
never believed the brothers who claim to "run," much less
"own," the city. We did not design the streets. We do not
fund them. We do not preserve them. But I was there,
nevertheless, charged like all the others with the protec- tion of my body.
The crews, the young men who'd transmuted their fear
into rage, were the greatest danger. The crews walked the
blocks of their neighborhood, loud and rude, because it
was only through their loud rudeness that they might feel
any sense of security and power. They would break your
jaw, stomp your face, and shoot you down to feel that
power, to revel in the might of their own bodies. And their
wild reveling, their astonishing acts made their names ring
out. Reps were made, atrocities recounted. And so in my
Baltimore it was known that when Cherry Hill rolled
through you rolled the other way, that North and Pulaski
was not an intersection but a hurricane, leaving only splin-
ters and shards in its wake. In that fashion, the security of
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 23
these neighborhoods flowed downward and became the
security of the bodies living there. You steered clear of]o-
Jo, for instance, because he was cousin to Keon, the don of
Murphy Homes. In other cities, indeed in other Balti-
mores, the neighborhoods had other handles and the boys
went by other names, but their mission did not change:
prove the inviolability of their block, of their bodies,
through their power to crack knees, ribs, and arms. This
practice was so common that today you can approach any
black person raised in the cities of that era and they can tell
you which crew ran which hood in their city, and they can
tell you the names of all the captains and all their cousins
and offer an anthology of all their exploits.
To survive the neighborhoods and shield my body, I
learned another language consisting of a basic comple-
ment of head nods and handshakes. I memorized a list of
prohibited blocks. I learned the smell and feel of fighting
weather. And I learned that "Shorty, can I see your bike?"
was never a sincere question, and "Yo, you was messing
with my cousin" was neither an earnest accusation nor a
misunderstanding of the facts. These were the summonses
that you answered with your left foot forward, your right
foot back, your hands guarding your face, one slightly
lower than the other, cocked like a hammer. Or they were
answered by breaking out, ducking through alleys, cutting
through backyards, then bounding through the door past
your kid brother into your bedroom, pulling the tool out
of your lambskin or from under your mattress or out of
24 TA-NEHISI COATES
your Adidas shoebox, then calling up your own cousins
(who really aren't) and returning to that same block, on
that same day, and to that same crew, hollering out, "Yeah,
nigger, what's up now?" I recall learning these laws clearer
than I recall learning my colors and shapes, because these laws were essential to the security of my body.
I think of this as a great difference between us. You have
some acquaintance with the old rules, but they are not as
essential to you as they were to me. I am sure that you have
had to deal with the occasional roughneck on the subway
or in the park, but when I was about your age, each day,
fully one-third of my brain was concerned with who I was
walking to school with, our precise number, the manner of
our walk, the number of times I smiled, who or what I
smiled at, who offered a pound and who did not-all of
which is to say that I practiced the culture of the streets a ' culture concerned chiefly with securing the body. I do not
long for those days. I have no desire to make you "tough" " " h b or street, per aps ecause any "toughness" I garnered
came reluctantly. I think I was always, somehow, aware of
the price. I think I somehow knew that that third of my
brain should have been concerned with more beautiful
things. I think I felt that something out there, some force,
nameless and vast, had robbed me of ... what? Time? Ex-
perience? I think you know something of what that third
could have done, and I think that is why you may feel the
need for escape even more than I did. You have seen all
the wonderful life up above the tree-line, yet you under-
----------------------- ----~-
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 25
stand that there is no real distance between you and Tray-
von Martin, and thus Trayvon Martin must terrifY you in a
way that he could never terrifY me. You have seen so
much more of all that is lost when they destroy your body.
The streets were not my only problem. If the streets
shackled my right leg, the schools shackled my left. Fail to
comprehend the streets and you gave up your body now.
But fail to comprehend the schools and you gave up your
body later. I suffered at the hands of both, but I resent the
schools more. There was nothing sanctified about the laws
of the streets-the laws were amoral and practical. You
rolled with a posse to the party as sure as you wore boots
in the snow, or raised an umbrella in the rain. These were
rules aimed at something obvious-the great danger that
haunted every visit to Shake & Bake, every bus ride down-
town. But the laws of the schools were aimed at something
distant and vague. What did it mean to, as our elders told
us, "grow up and be somebody"? And what precisely did
this have to do with an education rendered as rote dis-
cipline? To be educated in my Baltimore mostly meant
always packing an extra number 2 pencil and working qui-
etly. Educated children walked in single file on the right
side of the hallway, raised their hands to use the lavatory,
and carried the lavatory pass when en route. Educated
children never offered excuses-certainly not childhood
itsel£ The world had no time for the childhoods of black
boys and girls. How could the schools? Algebra, Biology,
and English were not subjects so much as opportunities to
26 TA-NEHISI COATES
better discipline the body, to practice writing between the
lines, copying the directions legibly, memorizing theorems
extracted from the world they were created to represent.
All of it felt so distant to me. I remember sitting in my
seventh-grade French class and not having any idea why
I was there. I did not know any French people, and noth-
ing around me suggested I ever would. France was a rock
rotating in another galaxy, around another sun, in another
sky that I would never cross. Why, precisely, was I sitting in this classroom?
The question was never answered. I was a curious boy,
but the schools were not concerned with curiosity. They
were concerned with compliance. I loved a few of my
teachers. But I cannot say that I truly believed any of them.
Some years after I'd left school, after I'd dropped out of
college, I heard a few lines from Nas that struck me:
Ecstasy, coke, you say it's love, it is poison
Schools where I learn they should be burned, it is poison
That was exactly how I felt back then. I sensed the
schools were hiding something, drugging us with false
morality so that we would not see, so that we did not ask:
Why-for us and only us-is the other side of free will
and free spirits an assault upon our bodies? This is not a
hyperbolic concern. When our elders presented school to
us, they did not present it as a place of high learning but
as a means of escape from death and penal warehousing.
BETWEEN THE WORLD AND ME 27
Fully 60 percent of all young black men who drop out of
high school will go to jail. This should disgrace the coun-
try. But it does not, and while I couldn't crunch the num-
bers or plumb the history back then, I sensed that the fear
that marked West Baltimore could not be explained by the
schools. Schools did not reveal truths, they concealed
them. Perhaps they must be burned away so that the heart
of this thing might be known.
Unfit for the schools, and in good measure wanting to
be unfit for them, and lacking the savvy I needed to master
the streets, I felt there could be no escape for me or, hon-
estly, anyone else. The fearless boys and girls who would
knuckle up, call on cousins and crews, and, if it came to it,
pull guns seemed to have mastered the streets. But their
knowledge peaked at seventeen, when they ventured out
of their parents' homes and discovered that America had
guns and cousins, too. I saw their futures in the tired faces
of mothers dragging themselves onto the 28 bus, swatting
and cursing at three-year-olds; I saw their futures in the
men out on the corner yelling obscenely at some young
girl because she would not smile. Some of them stood
outside liquor stores waiting on a few dollars for a bottle.
We would hand them a twenty and tell them to keep the
change. They would dash inside and return with Red Bull,
Mad Dog, or Cisco. Then we would walk to the house of
someone whose mother worked nights, play "Fuck tha
Police," and drink to our youth. We could not get out. The
ground we walked was trip-wired. The air we breathed