Yes, Hill Harper has a law degree and a masters from Harvard and remains close with his classmate President Barack Obama. And we've discovered the leading man also knows a thing or two about Black love. As Hill promotes his new Showtime film "This Is Not a Test," the actor and author of "Letters to a Young Brother," "Letters to a Young Sister" and his upcoming fall release, "The Conversation," shares with ESSENCE.com the secret to strong relationships in the Black community and whether men and women can really just be friends.
ESSENCE.COM:
You have traveled the country during President Obama's and your own
book tours. What's the biggest thing sisters aren't clued into about
men?
HILL HARPER: I've gotten a firsthand view at the
destruction that Black men and Black women not being able to stay and
build healthy relationships has had on the Black family and Black
children. I couldn't sit by silently. My whole next book is about
relationships. I'm not saying I have all the answers, I just hope to
start the conversation. The biggest issue I have learned is when it
comes to Black men and Black women, we are not communicating.
ESSENCE.COM: So what will it take for us to open the dialogue?
HARPER:
It takes really opening up and being willing to be vulnerable. We have
to ask the questions we really want answers to, instead of
manipulating. For the most part, we see Black women talking to Black
women and Black men talking to Black men. Are we really even friends
anymore? Obviously, we as men have a lot of cover we put on are very
resistant. At the same time, sisters put on a lot of cover, but act as
if they are knowledgable in relationships because they talk about them
all the time. But they talk amongst themselves and not to men, so it's
not cross gender.
ESSENCE.COM: This is true. But can men and women really just be friends?
HARPER:
Yes! Gabrielle Union is one of my best friends. People have always said
we've hooked up. We've shared great memories and very difficult times
together, but we've never crossed the line of friendship. Men and women
can absolutely be friends and that's what we need to be. Part of the
problem is that we aren't friends enough. Our relationships are
negotiations and that is not friendship.
ESSENCE.COM: In your new film "This Is Not a Test" your
character is having trouble in his marriage and life when he believes a
nuclear attack will hit. What can people learn from him?
HARPER:
We can learn to be prepared for the future, but to not let it consume
us. The movie is about fear. My character's outside fear of terrorism
is covering his underlying fear of connection and family. By the end he
learns it doesn't matter what happens, and what matters is that you are
connected. There will always be crazy things that happen in our lives,
but love is the central connector. If we commit to love and
partnership, the other stuff doesn't matter.
ESSENCE.COM:
And you've witnessed that up close with your friend and classmate
President Barack Obama and his wife, First Lady Michelle Obama.
HARPER: Absolutely.
Their relationship is really the type I learned about through both sets
of my grandparents, who were married for more than 50 years. The Obamas
represent that and it's a call to all of us to look at what our own
legacy will be. Having known him so long, it's wonderful for me to see
him and others build strong families. I want that type of relationship
in my life.
ESSENCE.COM: So what are you looking for in a woman to build that lasting relationship?
HARPER:
That's a really long answer. At the end of the day the real important
things are kindness and a sense of humor. I've been fortunate to have
dated and could have easily married women who have those qualities and
time and circumstances didn't work out. Timing plays a big part. I'll
recognize her when it's right.
Do you agree with Hill that men and women can just be friends? Share your thoughts below.








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