Halloween While Black

Saying ‘Boys Will Be Boys’ Won’t Fly for Halloween 2020

Given how things are going so far, it’s okay for All Hallows’ Eve to take an L

Adrienne Gibbs
Momentum
Published in
6 min readOct 29, 2020

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Photo: Darrin Klimek/Getty Images

America is a country divided and let’s face it: Black people often celebrate Halloween in a different way than White people do. Momentum takes a week-long look at #HalloweenWhileBlack.

A paintball incident that leaves a mailman injured and in the hospital. Gutters pulled off a house, resulting in $5,000 in damages. Packs of boys invading a family’s porch and ringing the doorbell repeatedly at 10:30 p.m. Young teens in a city playlot with their guns, where they proceed to shoot raccoons and stomp on animal heads.

All too often I witness some people refer to these incidents as if they are normal. “Boys will be boys,” they say. And if girls are involved, they change it to “kids will be kids!” “Don’t you remember doing this when you were a kid?” they ask. “We all played ding dong ditch!” they say. “We all pulled gutters off houses, stomped on raccoons by the toddler swings, and shot BB gun balls into the baby’s bedrooms! Didn’t you?”

Me: Uh no. No I don’t. No I didn’t. No I never. And, no I can’t.

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Momentum
Momentum

Published in Momentum

Momentum is a blog that captures and reflects the moment we find ourselves in, one where rampant anti-Black racism is leading to violence, trauma, protest, reflection, sorrow, and more. Momentum doesn’t look away when the news cycle shifts.

Adrienne Gibbs
Adrienne Gibbs

Written by Adrienne Gibbs

@adriennewrites on all socials Dir of Content @Medium. Award-winning writer. Featured by Beyoncé. Priors: EBONY, Netflix, Sun-Times, Miami Herald, Boston Globe

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