Crushing The Myth of White Privileged
Princeton
University Student’s Bold Response After Allegedly Being Told Repeatedly to
‘Check Your Privilege’
By Jason Howerton
Tal Fortgang, a freshman at Princeton University, says he has been
ordered to “check your privilege” by his “moral superiors” several times this
year because he happens to be a white male. In a column in the Princeton Tory,
Fortgang takes on the ideology he says ”assumes that simply because I belong to
a certain ethnic group I should be judged collectively with it.”
Tal Fortgang, Princeton University
“There is a phrase that floats around college campuses, Princeton being
no exception, that threatens to strike down opinions without regard for their
merits, but rather solely on the basis of the person that voiced them. ‘Check your privilege,’ the saying goes, and
I have been reprimanded by it several times this year,” the student writes.
“The phrase, handed down by my moral superiors, descends recklessly, like an
Obama-sanctioned drone, and aims laser-like at my pinkish-peach complexion, my
maleness, and the nerve I displayed in offering an opinion rooted in a personal
Weltanschauung.”
“‘Check your privilege,’ they tell me in a command that teeters between
an imposition to actually explore how I got where I am, and a reminder that I
ought to feel personally apologetic because white males seem to pull most of
the strings in the world,” he continues.
Fortgang then explores his family’s history to figure out where his
“privilege” comes from:
Perhaps it’s the privilege my grandfather
and his brother had to flee their home as teenagers when the Nazis invaded
Poland, leaving their mother and five younger siblings behind, running and
running until they reached a Displaced Persons camp in Siberia, where they
would do years of hard labor in the bitter cold until World War II ended. Maybe
it was the privilege my grandfather had of taking on the local Rabbi’s work in
that DP camp, telling him that the spiritual leader shouldn’t do hard work, but
should save his energy to pass Jewish tradition along to those who might
survive. Perhaps it was the privilege my great-grandmother and those five
great-aunts and uncles I never knew had of being shot into an open grave
outside their hometown. Maybe that’s my privilege.
Or maybe it’s the privilege my grandmother
had of spending weeks upon weeks on a death march through Polish forests in
subzero temperatures, one of just a handful to survive, only to be put
in Bergen-Belsen concentration camp where she would have died but for the Allied forces who liberated her and helped
her regain her health when her weight dwindled to barely 80 pounds.
Perhaps my privilege is that those two resilient individuals came to
America with no money and no English, obtained citizenship, learned the
language and met each other; that my grandfather started a humble wicker basket
business with nothing but long hours, an idea, and an iron will—to paraphrase
the man I never met: “I escaped
Hitler. Some business troubles are going to ruin me?” Maybe my privilege is
that they worked hard enough to raise four children, and to send them to Jewish
day school and eventually City College.
Perhaps it was my privilege that my own father worked hard enough in City
College to earn a spot at a top graduate school, got a good job, and for 25
years got up well before the crack of dawn, sacrificing precious time he wanted
to spend with those he valued most—his wife and kids—to earn that living. I can say with certainty there was no legacy
involved in any of his accomplishments. The wicker business just isn’t
that influential.Now would you say that we’ve been really privileged? That our
success has been gift-wrapped?
The real problem with the notion of automatic “privilege,” he explains,
is you have no idea what their struggles have really been or “what they may
have gone through to be where they are.”
“Behind every success, large or small, there is a story, and it isn’t
always told by sex or skin color. My
appearance certainly doesn’t tell the whole story, and to assume that it does
and that I should apologize for it is insulting,” Fortgang writes. “While I
haven’t done everything for myself up to this point in my life, someone
sacrificed themselves so that I can lead a better life. But that is a legacy I
am proud of.”
“I have checked my privilege. And I apologize for nothing,” he concludes.
Fortgang is from New Rochelle, N.Y., and plans to major in either history
or politics.
His column has received both praise and criticism. One commenter told Fortgang that as a “white
male, you are most likely ignorant of the ingrained racism or sexism that lives
in society today.”
“You want to play oppression olympics? What about the millions of blacks
enslaved in America for 300 years, who then had to deal with segregation and
Jim Crow while new immigrants were allowed to assimilate into white culture
within one or 2 generations,” another wrote.
One commenter on the College Fix website replied, “From a black guy
(although my pic doesn’t show it), good for him. And nicely said.”
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