In an interview with GQ magazine released Tuesday, October 27, Harry spoke to Patrick Hutchinson, who shot to fame after being pictured carrying an injured White man to safety during a Black Lives Matter protest in June.
Prince Harry
has revealed that his upbringing as a royal made him unaware of unconscious
racial bias, but that all of that has changed since he started living in the
shoes of his mixed race wife Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex.
The Duke of
Sussex told Hutchinson that you can't criticize people for showing their
unconscious bias, but once you realize it exist you have to educate yourself
because ignorance is no longer an excuse.
"Unconscious
bias, from my understanding having the upbringing and the education that I had,
I had no idea what it was. I had no idea it existed," said Harry.
Prince Harry
says he's had an 'awakening' on racism, in a world 'created by White people for
White people' "And then, sad as it is to say, it took me many, many years
to realize it, especially then living a day or a week in my wife's shoes."
Harry
emphasized that everyone needs to examine their unconscious attitude towards
race.
"And I
think one of the most dangerous things is people within positions of power,
whether it's politics or whether it's the media, where if you're not aware of
your own bias and you're not aware of the culture within your system, then how
are we ever going to progress?" he said.
Harry, who
was speaking from his home in California, said it's been a "very
interesting" time to live in the US, but underlined that change needs to
happen everywhere.
"It's
going to take every single one of us to really change things and anyone that's
pushing against it really needs to take a long, hard look at themselves in the
mirror," he said. "This is a global movement. The train has left the
station. If you're not on it now, then get on it because there's so much that
we can do. And being a dad myself, the whole point in life, I guess, for me, is
to try to leave the world in a better place than when you found it."
Earlier this
month, Harry said he only recently recognized the full extent of racism in
everyday life, telling the UK's Evening Standard newspaper: "I've had an
awakening as such of my own, because I wasn't aware of so many of the issues
and so many of the problems within the UK, but also globally as well. I thought
I did but I didn't."
Hutchinson
spoke of his frustration at the lack of understanding by some people about
Black Lives Matter and the fight against racism.
"There
are a lot of people who either don't think that it exists or they don't want
change and they're fighting against it," Hutchinson said.
"And I
don't know what these people are scared of, or afraid of."

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