When I Recognized Race: Nylse Esahc

by | Apr 10, 2020

I always say I recognized race and that I was black when I came to New York in 1978. For the first twelve years of my life, I lived in the Bahamas. We were a large family doing OK for ourselves. We could hire someone to do the cleaning and look down our noses on anyone in a lower position than us. The difference I discovered was class – those who had and those who didn’t, and we were somewhere in the middle.

Coming to America forced me to confront my blackness. Implied racism was seemingly innocuous. I did not have a catastrophic event that signaled my otherness; instead, it was a gradual peeling back of many layers. I discovered there were stereotypes around blackness – poor, dumb, single-parents. I did not fit into any of these. My parents were together, we bought a house, and education was paramount next to the Gospel in my household. If there was one thing we could control, it was our smarts, and we had it in spades. We were proud of our West Indian heritage, wielding it like a weapon to get ahead. In this cocoon of smartness, there was no blatant discrimination. Smart was my safety net, and it would help me weather the storms of racism, or so I thought.

In 1989, after graduation from college, I got married, and we moved to a town on the North Shore of Long Island, living in a friend’s basement apartment. This town was far away from everything I knew – people, food, church. We were a young couple living in an exclusively white community, and we felt it. My husband vividly remembers the night a cop followed him home, where he had to prove to the officer that he lived there. I remember feeling lonely and isolated performing the mundane – buying groceries, boutique shopping, picking up prescriptions, or commuting to work. When I became pregnant, I felt harshly treated by doctor’s disdain as a young, black, pregnant woman.

When I had my son in 1990, I noticed that he was the only black baby in the nursery. When I was home on maternity leave, walking my son, some white boys drove by and yelled at me. When I took my clothes to the cleaners, the lady checking my clothing commented with seeming surprise that I had beautiful clothes. None of these events were explicit, but these actions all compounded my isolation, my otherness because I was black. These feelings finally found an identification when we tried to look for a new apartment. I usually called to gather more information, but I never received a call back, it seemed, because of my accent. When my husband called the same number, the potential landlord specifically asked him if his wife was black, stating plainly that he didn’t want to rent to blacks.

It was good that the layers of the onion kept getting smaller–that we had something we could put our finger on. Racism was no longer implied, but still, there was no acknowledgment of what we felt. We clung to each other in our isolation. I reached the core of the onion when my local paper did a two-week series called “A World Apart.” Each day I devoured this series, and as I read, my experiences were validated. People seemed to be experiencing different worlds, and the experience of white people seemed to carry specific privileges. In a strange cathartic way, it was comforting to read what I had lived. No longer implicit or innocuous, what I had felt for so long was now out in the open.

 

In Conclusion: When I Recognized Race

When I think back to this time, I moved from a place of naivete to acceptance. It took me a while to delight in the part of me America considered black, but innately I’d always known I was all right. As someone who read and internalized the messages in the Bible, they anchored me. “When God created me, I was made in His Image, and I was very good (Genesis 1:27, 31). I was fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139:14).” I walked through this world, knowing that the truth of God’s Word applied to me regardless of what others thought about the color of my skin. It was probably why I dealt with racism the way I did. I expected what I gave to others. I became disappointed and hurt when I didn’t receive similar treatment, but I always remained hopeful.

Only Christ in me was responsible for that hope.

 


Prayer Requests:

  1. Pray for strength – Those affected by racism will be wise as serpents and harmless as doves (Matthew 10:16).
  2. Pray for transformation – Change the hard hearts of sinners  (Ezekiel 36:26-27).
  3. Pray for wisdom – to wield the weapons of our faith to break the stronghold of systemic racism. (2 Corinthians 10:3-4).

 

Recent POdcasts

Engaging Your Community

Engaging Your Community

Isaac and Austin are joined in the studio by Josh Chatman, Jared Torrence, DeMyron Haynes, and John Talley. We share ideas on how to engage our communities in reconciling work. How does that look in different settings? How do we keep our focus on the communities in...

read more
Mailbag: Listener Questions

Mailbag: Listener Questions

Isaac and Austin sit down to answer questions submitted by you, our listeners. This episode covers evangelism, interracial dating, adoption, and much more. We reference multiple resources, so check the show notes to learn more. LINKS & SHOW NOTES: Parts one and...

read more
Meals from Mars with Ben Sciacca

Meals from Mars with Ben Sciacca

  Austin and Isaac are joined by Ben Sciacca, author of Meals From Mars, which is one of our favorite books. Ben has years of experience in inner-city ministry and has much wisdom to share about working for the right reasons, avoiding burnout, and the...

read more

Upcoming Events

Isaac-Adams-United-We-Pray-speaking-at-an-event

Click Here to View Now

Recent Articles

A NOT SO SUBTLE SHIFT

A NOT SO SUBTLE SHIFT

Growing up as a black man in rural America, I had the joy and privilege of attending predominantly black churches in my community. My earliest memories of church life involve going to First Baptist to hear Doc Smith and Rev Gentry lead prayer meetings and Bible...

read more
JUDGMENT AND MERCY

JUDGMENT AND MERCY

The scribes and Pharisees brought her to Jesus for judgment. Caught in adultery, they desired to exact the full penalty of the law against a woman and pummel her to death with stones. Guilty. Exposed. Vulnerable. Her life was at the mercy of the mob and the verdict of...

read more
WHY I STUDY BLACK HISTORY

WHY I STUDY BLACK HISTORY

Black History Month sprang out of African American celebrations of Abraham Lincoln’s and Frederick Douglass’s February birthdays. “Negro History Week” began in February 1926 to recognize African American contributions to society and raise awareness of the prejudice...

read more

We’d love to hear what you think about this article. Submit your feedback by clicking here to contact us.

Author

  • Nylse Esahc

    Nylse is a Christian wife and a mother of four who currently resides in Los Angeles, CA. Originally from the Bahamas, she lived in New York before relocating to the West Coast. She is a Christian Blogger who writes to encourage others from a Godly perspective at www.lifenotesencouragement.com. When she’s not busy with her family or writing, she is actively involved in the Women’s Ministry at her church while also being a Technology Consultant. Nylse is feverishly completing her 2nd book. Connect with Nylse online: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and email.

Related Articles

A NOT SO SUBTLE SHIFT

A NOT SO SUBTLE SHIFT

Growing up as a black man in rural America, I had the joy and privilege of attending predominantly black churches in my community. My earliest memories of church life involve going to First Baptist to hear Doc Smith and Rev Gentry lead prayer meetings and Bible...

read more
JUDGMENT AND MERCY

JUDGMENT AND MERCY

The scribes and Pharisees brought her to Jesus for judgment. Caught in adultery, they desired to exact the full penalty of the law against a woman and pummel her to death with stones. Guilty. Exposed. Vulnerable. Her life was at the mercy of the mob and the verdict of...

read more
WHY I STUDY BLACK HISTORY

WHY I STUDY BLACK HISTORY

Black History Month sprang out of African American celebrations of Abraham Lincoln’s and Frederick Douglass’s February birthdays. “Negro History Week” began in February 1926 to recognize African American contributions to society and raise awareness of the prejudice...

read more

Stay Connected

Thanks to a generous grant, all donations to United? We Pray are being doubled through year-end.
A gift of any level will be matched at 100%, doubling the impact of every single donation.

We humbly ask you to give today

United? We Pray 2023