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“You are a thousand Nat Turners, a quiet spring of rebellion, and some folks don’t know how to handle that.” SOURCE

The polarizing trial of George Zimmerman for the death of Trayvon Martin introduced us to Rachel Jeantel, the woman who spoke to Martin moments before his death. She testified for seven hours and was blasted for her looks and manner of speaking.

The polarizing trial of George Zimmerman for the death of Trayvon Martin introduced us to Rachel Jeantel, the woman who spoke to Martin moments before his death. She testified for seven hours and was blasted for her looks and manner of speaking .

Image by Eduardo Munoz / Reuters

Khadijah Costley White, a faculty member at Rutgers University, penned an online letter on RoleReboot.orgto Jeantel over the incessant criticism levied at her online.

Khadijah Costley White, a faculty member at Rutgers University, penned an online letter on RoleReboot.org to Jeantel over the incessant criticism levied at her online.

Image by Pool / Getty Images

Dear Rachel,

I write this as I watch you testifying, tightening your lips, grinding your teeth in an attempt to be stoic, to not break down while you recount the grisly, too-soon murder of your friend. It was probably the most terrifying moment of your life. I can’t imagine listening, helpless, while my friend was stalked and murdered, panicked and afraid. You told him to run. You thought it would keep him safe. What could’ve been going through your mind that day? Did you worry when the phone was cut off? When Trayvon didn’t call you back or return any of your missed calls?

Image by Reuters

I’m so sorry that people are judging you, fixated more on your beautiful brown skin, your carefully applied make-up, your body, your being, than your trauma and your pain.

I’m sorry that you were born into a country where a man can pursue and kill a black boy, your friend, and go home the same night with the blessings of law enforcement officers.

This letter, I know, doesn’t make up for any of it.

Not for the unimaginable grief and pain you’ve suffered in the last year. Not for the guilt or shame you’ve probably felt, which no doubt has affected your health and will continue to affect your life, your dreams, your faith. I can’t even fix the extreme likelihood that you and your children might soon find it impossible to vote in your home state. Or that you were never taught to read cursive, or that the school you grew up attending was probably more like a prison than a place of learning.

Image by Reuters

There are a lot of hateful things being said about you—comparisons to “Precious” (as if Gabourey Sidibe isn’t a real person or, irony of ironies, that Precious wasn’t also a victim of trauma), people making fun of your frankness, your tenacity, your refusal to codeswitch out of your mother-sister-brother tongue.

Image by Reuters

In truth, you’re part of a long legacy of black women so often portrayed as the archetypal Bitch, piles of Sassafrasses, Mammies, and Jezebels easily dismissed, caricatured, and underestimated.

Don’t forget that in just the last few years, Fox News called the First Lady of the United States “Obama’s Baby Mama,” that a popular radio host referred to a group of college athletes as “nappy-headed hoes,” and that even a gold-medal Olympian wasn’t able to escape physical scrutiny and bodily criticism on the world stage.

Image by Reuters

I just want you to know: I am so proud of you. In you I see a fierce resistance that reminds me of ancestors past.

Each time you open your mouth, look down, clench your cheeks in a fresh wave of pain, I see Sojourner Truth, Harriet Tubman, and Fannie Lou Hamer joining their spirits and bonding their strength to yours. I see a survivor, a woman who has miraculously kept her mind and nurtured her sanity enough that she can sit, for hours, and recount such horror. You have a brilliance that flares out, only to be quickly veiled by a glance down or a quiet stare. Past your soul-wrenching pain and your child-like bravado, I see hope and possibility, a small green tendril creeping out of a concrete playground. I see YOU.