I guess it is not surprising that I
had some tendencies to be prejudiced. I went to Public School 76
through 4th grade and then to St. Michael the Archangel’s school
until the 8th grade. Both schools were in the East New York
section of Brooklyn. For my 4 years of high school I attended Our Lady of
Wisdom Academy in Ozone Park, Queens, NY and then graduated from St. Vincent’s
Hospital School of Nursing in New York City. In all those many years of
schooling, there was not one single black person in any of my classes.
Not a one!!! Let me remind you, I was not living south of the Mason-Dixon
Line rather; I was living in Brooklyn and attending schools in 3 of the 5 boroughs
of metropolitan New York City-the largest city in the world. I was
a little white girl, living in a lily white world. I was never
exposed to people of color except for what I saw on the television and that was
not always a positive exposure. I heard people say that “Black
Bastard” when Martin Luther King appeared on the TV screen. I saw
people in power and people in governing positions treating people of color as
if they were subhuman or at least not as important as us white
people. I doubt whether my experience was unique. I don’t
think I was the only one to observe and encounter such things.
I have been told by co-workers and
other people who have known me during my life, that I am a "reverse"
Racist, in other words I do "too much" for our African-American
families and clients. I guess they may be correct, but I believe I am
justified. I am attempting, in some small way, to make up for the
horrendous injustices that the people of color in our country have had to
endure. Having been born 75 years ago, I have lived through and witnessed
some of these terrible injustices and I have been guilty of the sins of racism,
and prejudice myself. So, please,let me, and let all of us mighty white
Americans attempt to make up in some small way for the hundreds of years of
injustices inflicted on our fellow Americans because their skin color was
different than ours.
Regarding the photograph at the top
of this Blog entry:
I was 12 years old on Sep 6th, 1957
when this brave young girl, Elizabeth Eckford ignores the hostile screams and
stares of fellow students on her first day of school. She was one of the nine
negro students whose integration into Little Rock’s Central High School in
Arkansas was ordered by a Federal Court following legal action by NAACP. —
Image by © Bettmann/CORBIS
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