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August 21, 2012

Stop Hating On Darkness.

Why do we often associate darkness with evil?

It’s a common analogy, used as a teaching tool in many settings. You’ve heard it I’m sure? The light is good and the dark is evil.  Even Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. reinforced this allegory:

Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that.
Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.

With these words, Dr. King correlates darkness with hate. And he’s not alone.

Over the years, I’ve stumbled upon enlightened teachers, in all shades of complexion, having a hard time breaking out of the mental conditioning that white is good and black is bad. Although seeming harmless to many, for someone with dark skin complexion the effects of this analogy can cause a psychological impression beyond what appears on the surface.

In the 1940s, Dr. Kenneth Bancroft Clark designed a test to study the psychological effects of segregation on black children. In his “Doll Test” Dr. Clark used four plastic, diaper-clad dolls, identical in everything except color. They showed the dolls to black children between the ages of three and seven and asked them questions to determine racial awareness and preference. Almost all of the children were able to identify the race of the dolls; however, when asked which they preferred, the majority selected the white doll and attributed positive characteristics to it.

Dr. Clark’s famous “Doll Test” was later used in the 1950s as expert social science testimony in a number of legal cases and was endorsed by 35 leading social scientists. The Supreme Court specifically cited his 1950 paper on the “Doll Test” in their Brown vs. Board of Education landmark decision. This gave teachers and educators the knowledge and responsibility to know how analogies negatively impact the subconscious self-image of our children (and adults).

Malcolm X also spent time in his speeches addressing this negative association with color that Dr. Clark scientifically explored. He observed that in the fifth edition of Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, the word “white” was partially defined as, “Free from spot or blemish, innocent, pure, without evil intent, harmless, honest, square dealing and honorable.”

Meanwhile, the word black contained in its definition, “Foul, evil, ugly, hatred, utterly dismal or gloomy, sullen, hostile, outrageously wicked, indicating disgrace or dishonor.” Malcolm X believed these unfair definitions furthered implicit stereotypes and deepened the internalized oppression and self-hatred that black people were already working so hard to overcome.

The phenomenon of negative color association with darkness still rapes the psyche and self-image of people around the world today.

Skin lightening soaps and creams are commonly used by millions of people in African and Asian nations, as well as amongst dark skin populations living in North America and Europe. A 2008 study conducted by the World Health Organization discovered that 77 percent of Nigerians, 59 percent of Togolese and 35 percent of South Africans used skin-lightening products on a regular basis.  Meanwhile, a 2011 study in India saw 61 percent of the dermatological market consisting of skin lightening products.

If you study the complexion of Bollywood actors and magazine models in India, you’ll find that the whiter your skin the greater chance you’ll have of being cast in the star role. Fascinatingly enough, in the industrialized world amongst whites, the opposite pattern sometimes occurs. Spending hours in the sun or a tanning salon has become a prescription for beauty, simply proving that the moon is always darker on the other side.

For what are these things that we know of as darkness and lightness?
Do they have any objective meaning besides what we have socially superimposed?

Perhaps humans are afraid of the dark because our ability to survive decreases. Come nighttime we become fearful because our eyes are not very discerning. We’re more susceptible to a surprise attack because we do not know what is in our surroundings. A fear of darkness is natural for humans, but does that make darkness “bad” or “evil?” Subjectively, perhaps for humans it does, but how about for a bat, owl or other nocturnal creature?

Many living organisms thrive in darkness and have developed keener senses of sight (through sound) for the blackness of night. For these creatures darkness surely is not an enemy but a stalwart friend that enables their survival. For them darkness is “good,” and daytime is when they’re hiding.

Water is never stiff
Light is never blind
Inside darkness is born life.

Perhaps if you’re reading this and you love sleep, then darkness is not so bad all the time? In fact, you probably crave it when you shut your eyes.  Perhaps if you’re reading this and you’re fascinated by the unknown then darkness serves a great purpose, for within it exploration and searching is given birth, and these are prime movers of our evolution.

It’s within darkness that a majestic seed of creation and birth is planted. The womb is pitch black. In absolute darkness inception takes place, and in the black is where new life is incubated, nurtured, grown and sewn.

Seeds are planted underground, in the darkness of dirt, where they begin their journey, sure, toward the sun light, but until they break out of the soil they are moving through darkness. In fact, darkness is what provides the roots motivation to move upward toward the light, and roots, the lifeblood for the flowers remain submerged until the very end.

If we change our perception we can easily see more sides to the story, and hopefully discover more creative allegories that speak to the truth of beauty.

In the Western world, there is a common misperception that the ancient Chinese Yin-Yang symbol correlates to good and evil. A deeper probing into the metaphysics of Taoism reveals however, our perceptions are subjective and create dichotomy to what is otherwise an indivisible whole. Lightness and darkness cannot possess any human characteristic or contain our projection of good and evil. Dark and light are not opposing forces but rather complementary forces—they need each other to exist.

Now doesn’t that make darkness quite a beautiful thing?

Darkness can teach us about our nature and illuminate from where we came from, but only if we move past associating it with bad and evil. So instead of fearing night time, or day time, let us embrace them and realize that whether black or white, light or dark, you’re simply another hue of life.

Editor: Lynn Hasselberger

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