There was one thing she said in her missive, however, which is a common sentiment on her campus and one which I asked her to reconsider. She stated that part of the obligation she feels to help the poor is a result of the fact that she's "a white, middle class, educated female with a tremendous amount of undeserved privilege."
I know students are encouraged by liberal professors to think that one's race or gender confer upon one a large measure of undeserved privilege, but to tell the truth, I think my colleagues are wrong about this.
The idea of white privilege is a shibboleth that's too often used to evoke in whites a sense of racial guilt. In my response to this student I tried to explain why I think her acceptance of this guilt actually diminishes the choices and sacrifices made by her grandparents, parents, and even herself. Here's what I wrote:
Dear S_,There are three or four things that people can do to lift themselves out of poverty and none of them have much to do with their race: 1. Stay in school and graduate, 2. Get married before having children and stay married afterward, 3. Be a solid, dependable employee at whatever job they get, and 4. Stay away from drugs, alcohol and pornography.
Yours is a lovely e-mail, and I think it's wonderful that you want to give of yourself to those who subsist on the margins of society. I wish you well and pray God's blessing on your efforts.
I do want to urge you, though, to consider something. Maybe I'm reading a little too much into what you say, but you seem to suggest that your status in society is somehow an undeserved privilege. If that is what you're saying I don't think you should see it that way.
You are what you are and have what you have for a number of reasons. First, your parents and grandparents stayed married and worked very hard, sometimes 12 or more hours a day, I'll bet, to provide you with an opportunity to get an education. Your status is largely the fruit of their toil, as well as dozens of other important and wise choices they made in life, and it's not something you should feel guilty about.
Indeed, I think it diminishes their effort to think of your status as largely a consequence of your race. So far from feeling that your privilege is undeserved, I think you should be proud of the people who made it possible and grateful for their sacrifices and the choices they made.
A second reason you enjoy the status you do is because, once given the opportunities your parents and grandparents worked so hard for, you had the character to make the most of them. You took advantage of the opportunity to get an education, you held yourself to high personal and academic standards through your teen years, and you had the wisdom to not squander the heritage handed down to you.
None of this has much to do with your race. I know that some instructors on your campus think that being white somehow confers an unfair advantage over others in society, but I think that's mistaken. It was true historically, of course, but it hasn't been the case in the U.S. for a long time. No one has been legally denied opportunity in this country by virtue of his or her race for well over fifty years.
If people in the U.S. languish in poverty it's often - though of course not always - because of the choices both they and their parents have made, not the color of their skin.
The fact is that there are lots of African and Asian-Americans who are successful in this society, but no one talks about black privilege or brown privilege. Instead they talk, as they should, about how hard the parents of those people worked and the ordeals their parents endured in order to give their children a chance to make it in the world.
Contrarily, there are whites, blacks and Asians who enjoy historically unprecedented opportunities to make a positive mark in life but fail to do so because they lack the character it takes to make something of themselves.
In other words, you enjoy the status you do, S_, not because you're privileged by your race but because you're privileged to have the parents and virtues you do. It's wonderful to want to "give back" but don't let anyone imply that you should do so out of guilt over your race or class. Your motivation should be your love for God and the conviction that he wants you to be an instrument to help others to live a better life.
Few people who do these things are poor, and one doesn't have to be "privileged" in order to do them.
There's nothing more lethal to the aspirations of those born into poverty than the claim that they can't make it out of their circumstances because of their race, that the deck is stacked against them. That falsehood seeps into the psyche of a man or woman and becomes an excuse for failure and a rationalization for not trying.
Nor does it ennoble the efforts of those who choose to do good work among the poor to be motivated by a mistaken need to expiate some false sense of racial guilt.