Community Programs Region Of Diversity Conference
III. Living Together? Real Stories
Dan Welliver
Unpacking White Privilege
Through an interactive skit presentation style,
Dan Welliver presented several ways in which he had special
advantages that others did not have just because he was born
a little boy with light, white skin in central
PA. Using the work of Peggy McIntosh, White Privilege:
Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack as an inspiration,
Dan presented his knapsack which contained items
that represented his un-earned privileges.
Crayons White. Black Flesh
When he was growing up as a child, he could draw a picture
of himself that accurately represented his own skin color
with a crayon color called flesh. This was an
advantage and an affirmation that some other children could
not access. Today there are Multi-Cultural Crayons.
World Map
The world map that he grew up with in school was the Mercator
Projection Map, with the United States in the center; two
Indias; the Asian continent split in half at the edges
of the map; and the relative land areas of the continents
grossly distorted, with Europe and North America appearing
fairly large, relative to other continents. The Peters Projection
world map, on the other hand, has Africa and the Equator at
the center of the map. At first, the map appears very strange
as it presents land areas in actual, relative proportion,
thus making continents like Africa and South America look
very large, and Europe and North America very small, compared
to the Mercator Projection map. Having a map that puts
me in the center, and makes Europe look big is a nice advantage
for a European-American geography student!
First aid bandages that are made to be inconspicuous for
people with light skin
History lessons that depicted Europeans as explorers
and conquerors and discoverers
Schoolbooks with illustrations of people who look like
me and my family.
All of these items were pulled from the weightless, invisible
knapsack of conferred dominance.
Then Dan brought out his heavy baggage, which,
he said, grows heavier the more he learns about his knapsack.
This baggage is what he carries as
a white male who is apprized of his un-earned privileges.
The baggage contained things like guilt,
having to always appear in control, being separated
from people who could enrich his life in many ways, and defensiveness
about his own complicity in perpetuating racism, sexism, and
classism.
* Dan Welliver is Director of Education and Community Services
for the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission, a position
he has held since January of 1998. He is also coordinator
of the PA Inter-Agency Task Force on Civil Tension. Before
joining the PHRC, Dan served for over nine years as Executive
Director of Neighborhood Center of the United Methodist Church.
He is a graduate of Juniata College and holds an M.A. in Community
Psychology from Pennsylvania State University.
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