The growing toll of racism in America

EL PASO, Texas — Olivia Ortega is not sure she’ll continue speaking Spanish with her three bilingual kids in public places in West Texas, after a gunman targeting “Mexicans” opened fire in an El Paso Walmart earlier this month.

In upstate New York, children living in a black Muslim enclave play an adaptation of tag. The name of a would-be anti-Muslim bomber, Robert Doggart, who was arrested in 2015 for plotting to destroy their community, serves as “it.”

And, at a Fort Worth, Texas, church that holds Sunday services in Korean, Burmese, Swahili, Spanish and other languages, the Rev. Will Aplicano has recently fielded calls from immigrants asking if it’s safe for them to gather together to pray.

For some Americans who are members of racial, ethnic and religious minority groups — long the targets of President Donald Trump’s rotating ire — the way that hate and violence can combine has moved from the realm of historical knowledge to known risk to, now, looming fear.

Immigrants, Muslims and people of color who spoke to NBC News say they’ve watched with growing alarm as racist rhetoric has become more commonplace, both on the internet and in their communities, leading to a rise in hate crimes three years in a row and a drop in their sense of security.

For some, catastrophic events like the El Paso shooting, which left 22 people dead, jolted them into the realities of America in 2019.

For others, particularly many racial, ethnic and religious minorities, it marked a sickening extension of the big and small insults, threats and injustices long a part of American life, even in a country that promises equality for all.

It’s that combination, what’s happening now and all that’s long happened, that raises the risk of debilitating trauma for those exposed to persistent reasons to fear, experts say.

“When we think about trauma, often we think about individual incidents — someone being raped or seeing combat — but in fact, trauma is cumulative,” said Monnica Williams, a psychologist who has researched the impact of racism on mental health at the University of Connecticut and developed the concept of racial trauma-induced post-traumatic stress disorder and the tests used by some clinicians to diagnose it.

“So the more traumatic events to which you have been exposed, the more likely to experience PTSD.”

Racism’s physical, emotional and financial toll can be so devastating that the American Academy of Pediatrics issued its first policy statement this week on its effect on the health of the nation’s children.

While long in the works, the warning of racism’s impact and recommendations for how doctors should respond seems particularly necessary now given the “cultural climate” and recent events, Dr. Jacqueline Dougé, a pediatrician who co-wrote the policy, said.

“Racism is not a new thing or a simple thing,” Dougé said. “It’s obviously incredibly complex but presenting differently at present.”

source: nbcnews.com