Page 10 July 7, 2021 C LASSIFIEDS /B IDS Portland Man Basks in Pulitzer Prize C ontinued froM P age 2 APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAMS ONLINE APPLICATION ONLY AREA I Plumbers Apprenticeship Program(Non Union) Requirements-min 18 yrs old, HS Diploma/GED and transcript w/1 yr. HS algebra or higher w/passing grade or equivalent community college placement test. Accepting applications July 6-19 Area I Sign Installers Apprenticeship program(Non Union) Accepting applications all year Requirements-min 18 yrs old/HS Diploma or GED & 1 yr. HS pre-algebra or equivalent post HS with “C” or above Area I Painters Apprenticeship program (Non Union) Accepting applications All year Must supply proof of Minimum 17 years old. For information on our openings, please visit our website www. areaonejatc.com Minorities and women encouraged to apply. Fifth Avenue Court Apartments Waitlist open for affordable studios and 1 bedrooms Income and student restrictions apply P:503.241.8404 E: Fifthavenue@cresapts.com Newspaper Delivery Drivers Wanted The Portland Observer is looking to hire delivery drivers for our newspaper distribution. Call 503-288-0033 Or email ads@portlandobserver.com her new puppy and driving more than an hour to Savannah to buy a Build-A-Bear and a gold, heart- shaped promise ring for his girl- friend Shenice Johnson, who said he was always a perfect gentle- man. “When I was with him, I didn’t have to worry about anything,” she said. Jackson’s detailed description of Arbery’s life reveals a person- able and caring young man with a lot of love for his family and friends. Jackson’s narrative about the murder is both chilling in its brutality and heart breaking, that such a promising and hopeful young man was slaughtered be- cause of the color of his skin. Jackson was certainly aware of racism while growing up in north and northeast Portland, “the whitest city in America,” but he doesn’t think things have gotten much better. “I realized how segregated we were then, but I didn’t understand the mechanisms, like redlining,” he said in an interview with the Portland Observer. Violence in last year’s Black Lives Matter protests overshad- owed the violence that Black lives face every day from police, and Jackson lamented that white groups, though they had good intentions, took over some of the demonstrations when they should have let Black voices lead. “They were not wrong, but they seemed to overshadow the violence that actually happened against Black people and people of color,” he said. “Maybe one thing to learn in Portland is that allyship doesn’t have to be so loud – let them lead.” But whites, if they will, can help combat racism, he said, by examining their own vanities and motives and doing what they can to even the racial playing field. “If you see something (that is racist), say something,” he said. “That’s what white people should be doing all the time.” Jackson also wrote about the history of jogging, which was started in the U.S. by Bill Bow- erman, former track coach and co-founder of Nike, but he said it’s still a white man’s sport. “Ahmaud Arbery, by all ac- counts, loved to run but didn’t call himself a runner. That is a short- coming of the culture of running,” Jackson wrote. “That Maud’s jog- ging made him the target of he- gemonic white forces is a certain failure of America…Blacks ain’t never owned the same freedom of movement as whites…” And education, of course, is another way to combat racism, by teaching children the truth about our racist past. “I think it’s necessary,” he said. “It’s been politicized but it doesn’t have anything to do with poli- tics…I’m not buying into that it’s making white kids racist to teach about racism in America. It’s not making little white kids racist or feel guilty, and if they do, that’s healthy.” Jackson said racism is an insid- ious problem here and it’s easy for Black people to feel defeated. He knows what he’s talking about. He got into trouble as a teen and spent 16 months in the Santiam Correc- tional Facility in Salem. But he turned himself around and earned a bachelor’s in speech commu- nication and master’s in writing from Portland State University followed by a master’s in fine arts in creative writing from New York University. You just can’t give up hope, he said. “I think it’s almost about learn- ing about your circumstances but don’t feel submerged in them, which is easy to do, with people getting shot every day, living in Section 8, it’s real easy to feel defeated,” he said. “But if you in- vestigate and interrogate, to have a better perspective and also find people who will give you aid and perspective — and stay hopeful — that’s what it’s all about.” Arbery’s killing, along with those of Breonna Taylor, George Floyd and other Black Americans, contributed to a wave of protests last summer in the movement against systemic racism and police brutality, which Jackson addressed in an interview with the Universi- ty of Chicago News, where until recently he was a faculty member teaching creative writing. He’ll be starting a new position, also teach- ing creative writing, in the English department at the University of Arizona this fall. “Oftentimes victims of police brutality or misconduct … are just seen as a victim,” Jackson said. “It was really important to me to show how Arbery lived, which is why I named the piece ‘Twelve Minutes and a Life,’ because his life was just as important as the 12 minutes when he was hunted.” He succeeded, according to the Pulitzer Prize Board, which recognized Jackson “for a deeply affecting account of the killing” of Arbery that “combined vivid writing, thorough reporting and personal experience to shed light on systemic racism in America.” Jackson is the author of mul- tiple works of fiction and nonfic- tion, according to the University newspaper, including his mem- oir “Survival Math,” about his experiences growing up Black in Portland, and the novel “The Residue Years.” He is the recip- ient of a Guggenheim Fellow- ship, a Creative Capital Grant, a PEN/Hemingway debut fiction award and numerous other writ- ing honors. “Mitchell S. Jackson’s special brilliance, announced in his mem- oir, ‘Survival Math,’ lies in pre- senting individual Black men with respect, honesty and love, track- ing with detailed research and in powerful prose how each has found ways to survive in a hos- tile world,” said John Wilkinson, chair of the University of Chica- go’s creative writing program.