Thursday, November 6, 2008

After the Election

A reminder. If you haven't already, go back and read the comments at the bottom of the blogs.
They are most entertaining and one of the primary reasons for doing this blog in the first place. Also, don't hesitate to leave a comment yourselves. It is easy. Just fill out the comment box, then pick an I.D. which ranges from your google name and password all the way to anonymous.
Now....go read the limericks from the previous post. Talk about hysterical!
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I received this thought provoking email from Patsy, which got me
remembering my own history.
Care to share yours?
From Patsy:


The election is over, and I have been reflecting on its meaning. All of the pundits have been referring to this election as "historic." This is certainly true in two main ways--an African-American presidential nominee and the Republican nomination of a woman for vice-president. I would like to look at this election in a more personal way.

I was born in 1938 and grew up in Ft. Worth, Texas, a completely segregated city. Everything was divided into black and white: the schools, the swimming pools, the parks, the bus and train stations, the cemeteries, the movie theaters, the hospitals, the churches, the doctor's offices, the funeral homes, the neighborhoods, and the restaurants, diners, and coffee shops.

When my mother and I went downtown to shop (there were no malls back then), there were two water fountains by the elevators. One was labeled "Colored" and one "White."


I always wondered what would happen if I drank out of the wrong one. Being a child, I imagined that an alarm would sound and I would be arrested or something. So, of course, I never tried it or even asked. In public places, there had to be four restrooms divided by race and gender. (You can figure it out.) In smaller businesses, there were usually no restrooms for blacks at all.

There was a very popular barbecue restaurant in what was called "Colored Town" called The Big Apple. Many whites ate there, but blacks were not allowed inside. They could go to a window in the back of the restaurant and order food to go. It may have been the original "Take Out" in Ft. Worth.

I was never in a classroom with an African-American student until I started teaching in San Antonio in 1962. (San Antonio was integrated early and never had the racial conflicts that other southern cities had.)

This was the norm, and I accepted it. When I was in the 8th grade my parents and I moved, and I rode a city bus across town to and from school each day. The white people sat in the seats from the back door to the front. The black people had to sit from the back door to the rear. Of course, there are fewer seats back there. There was no sign or marker indicating this fact. Everyone just knew. Sometimes the seats at the back of the bus would all be taken, and black people had to stand crammed in the aisle in their section. The front of the bus might have plenty of empty seats, but no black people sat there, ever.

In 1968, I was teaching American History to 10th graders, and we were studying the Civil Rights Movement. I was telling the class about all these things I have written about here. The students seemed very involved in my lecture. When I got to the part about the buses, one young man raised his hand and said, "Mrs. Thompson, what did you do about it?"

There was a long silence on my part. I finally said, "Nothing." I went on to explain how I was just 13 years old and didn't think I could do anything about it even though it seemed unfair. That seemed like a lame excuse at the time and still does today.

Patsy 108

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From me:

I grew up as an Air Force Brat in communities as diverse as a Washington D.C,. suburb to an Alaskan outpost to Hawaii. The suburbs were white, the schools were white-never a black face seen socially. I just didn't think about it much when I was really young. In 8th grade, in Alaska, there were a few black kids in my on-base school. We walked home together and shared gripes about parents, worries about boys. It was naturally occurring, it just happened. Nobody said I couldn't or shouldn't.

When we returned to the lower 48, in high school, I started becoming aware of the hatred and segregation in the south ... and elsewhere, too, but THE SOUTH was in all the papers as the truly evil center of the universe. I vowed I would never go THERE!
Who knew?! I spent 20 years in the New Orleans area. Whether it was the times, or the area, I got to know a lot more African-Americans personally. Families just like mine. Mothers, kids, daddies.
There is evil everywhere. My own father told me in all sanctimonious seriousness, "I will dig a ditch alongside a Negro but I will never invite him into my house." And he felt proud of himself admitting he would work along side a black man.
Maybe we will stop seeing the differences and just connect with similarities, someday.
SueZ #38

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3 comments:

lilizard62 said...

I grew up in Rio Grande City.
I had never met a human being of a different color. Except Gringos until... My dad worked in different places around the US and the world.
One summer, my sister and I met up with him in Louisiana. This was the first trip without my mom.
Anyway my dad stayed in a mobile home park in town and would go off to work during the day...One afternoon we decided to go to swimming in the city pool.
I had never seen so many black children in my life and I was excited to meet them.
My sister and I stayed in one corner and we were arguing over a pool toy and two little girls came up to us and stared for a while.
One of them spoke up and said.
"You sure do talk funny."
Racism never crossed my mind at the time. I didn't notice if there were any other whites, hispanics or other colors.

alan said...

Lets hope ALL human beings learn to get along!!!!!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

Amen, Alan!