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Read Azealia Banks' Essay on Blackness and Mental Health

"I've been belittled, berated, stolen from, called crazy when making clear and true observations about the world we live in only to then have all of those things reveal themselves to be truths."

Photo via Azealia Banks' Twitter

It's been kind of a wild month to be following what Azealia Banks has been doing. This past week, she used Twitter to target multiple people and groups, including Zayn Malik, Skai Jackson, and The UK's grime scene, launching huge tirades against each. These actions caused a lot of push-back, including UK government considering whether or not to ban her from entering the country, as well as Twitter suspending her account. After trying to make a new account and having it deleted, she took to Instagram to write a long and thoughtful essay about what's transpired recently and why she used the language she has against Zayn and others. She brings up points like how when she entered the music industry, many executives she ran into would criticize her appearance to levels that would other her, as well as what she sees as other artists trying to steal her art.

You can read the whole essay below.

This is 100% true. Black folk are the first to discard their own especially when white media/society hangs one of us out for public crucifixion. From the minute I appeared on the scene I was told by black men in black media that I was ugly, skinny, had bad hair, was weird, made music for white people etc… And those messages penetrated the social consciousness of black America very quickly. I've been belittled, berated, stolen from, called crazy when making clear and true observations about the world we live in only to then have all of those things reveal themselves to be truths. I'm not blaming anyone or anything for any of my actions but I think it's really important to for people outside of us (black folk) to understand the detrimental effects of whiteness and white supremacy/white cultural pervasiveness on black peoples MENTAL HEALTH as a whole and the MENTAL HEALTH of black individual herself. Zayn feeling as though he's too good to acknowledge me, yet not too good to STEAL and copy my art is fucking HURTFUL. And it happens everywhere. People steal and copy my art ALL THE TIME and try to pretend as if they are somehow above me when they are the ones without their own creative ideas to begin with. Music industry politics which completely mimic racial social constructs allow people like Zayn to hide behind his popularity amongst white folk when he himself is aiding in the work of white supremacy. Cultural Erasure. Another instance of a "white" artist taking credit for the black artists hard work and passion. And truthfully, it's pushing me over the fucking edge. White society grinds down the self esteem of black artists to the point where we are expected to be silent about such obvious transgressions.

A photo posted by Azealia Banks (@azealiabanks) on May 12, 2016 at 5:09pm PDT

Pt2: Calling him racial slurs was my way of trying to angrily remind him that he is in fact not one of them, he is one of US. The white privileges he's so eager to take part in do not apply to him. He's colored, like me. His people suffer at the helm of white supremacy just like mine do. He has NO RIGHT to treat me as if I'm not "worthy" of anything, because the white privilege he's reaching for does not apply to him. In the racial-social construct of the pop world he is STILL beneath Justin Beiber. There are countless other white male pop stars who will be pushed to the front of the line while he has to work TWICE AS HARD to even be noticed. He needs a reality check and needs to respect that I am one of those people WHO HAS TO WORK TWICE AS HARD maybe 3x to make this happen for myself. Respect that we are both in the same boat and stop letting all that white pussy go to ur head.

A photo posted by Azealia Banks (@azealiabanks) on May 12, 2016 at 5:21pm PDT