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Ellen McGirt

The British royal family correctly responds to a charge of racism, thanks to Harry and Megan

A group of people with a white woman at the front and a black woman over her left shoulder (Credit: Kin Cheung—WPA Pool via Getty Images)

Happy Friday.

A new monarch, a familiar scandal.

The British royal institution has found itself in yet another racism-themed scandal. This time, it was a longtime aide who insulted a Black nonprofit leader at an event at Buckingham Palace by moving her hair, studying her nametag, and repeatedly asking “where she was really from.”

“It was like an interrogation,” Ngozi Fulani, who runs the domestic violence charity Sistah Space, told the BBC. “Although it’s not physical violence—it is an abuse.” Sistah Space is the only U.K. organization that focuses on the gender violence issues facing girls and women of African and Caribbean descent. "And that felt like violence to me, and when you put your hand in my hair like I'm not even a person—you can just do what you want and say what you want—I don't want to be in your presence."

The aide in question was Lady Susan Hussey, a longtime lady-in-waiting to the late Queen Elizabeth and Prince William’s godmother. The event was a reception for advocates and policymakers at Buckingham Palace as part of the United Nations's “16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence.” The event was hosted by the Queen Consort and guests included Sophie, Countess of Wessex, Queen Rania of Jordan, Queen Mathilde of Belgium, Crown Princess Mary of Denmark, and First Lady of Ukraine Olena Zelenska.

So, you see where this would be a problem.

That this ugly microaggression has now been heard around the world is some form of progress, an affirmation that the current royal hierarchy better understands what is at stake. Hussey resigned from her duties immediately after the incident went public, and a spokesperson for Prince William said, "Racism has no place in our society."

And others say this affirms the many painful allegations leveled by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.

“Meghan Markle talked about this, and she got roundly abused—and she’s still the target of negativity in the British press,” Diane Abbott, a Labour MP who was the first Black woman elected to the House of Commons in 1987 and whose constituency includes Fulani, told CNN. “I think this incident shows that what Meghan Markle was trying to indicate is true.”

Meghan and Harry risked their lives, livelihoods, and legacies to make the private assaults they experienced public, a risk that all advocates, allies, truthtellers, and whistleblowers share. Because of their work, we are all a bit closer to a shared understanding of what it means to question a person’s legitimacy publicly, as Fulani experienced.

And because we are navigating the conversation that they started, we can now turn our focus to why a charity like Sistah Space is still necessary.

It’s systemic racism.

In an interview with Sky News, Fulani shared details of her life growing up as the victim of racist abuse and systemic neglect as the child of immigrants. "There are so many things that women like us have to consider before we access mainstream services,” she said, identifying specific biases that Black victims must navigate to get help.

"We are often met by people who see Black women as not in need of protection, we often get things like 'Strong woman like you, I can't believe anybody would do anything to you.' So this tendency to brush off domestic abuse and sexual abuse is so inherent that most Black women don't see the point in reporting domestic abuse to a system that doesn't see them and doesn't listen."

Wishing you a powerful weekend.

Ellen McGirt
@ellmcgirt
Ellen.McGirt@fortune.com

This edition of raceAhead was edited by Jack Long.

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