
Passing
Fannie
Nellie
Bly


 
 



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February 22, 2004
LIFE; Pg. 1F
By JENNIFER SANDERSON
Reuben Rodriguez made it to fourth grade before strangers pointed out
a basic truth he'd not yet realized about himself.
"My first memory of knowing I was different is a negative one,"
Rodriguez, 16, said earlier this month during a classroom discussion about
race at Washington High School.
"I was in the ball pit at Chuck E. Cheese, having a blast, and there
were these other boys there," Rodriguez told classmates. "They
started throwing balls at my head, calling me 'nigger'. ... My mom comforted
me while I cried in my pizza, and then later, when I went home and cried.
She just told me, 'It's what's inside that counts.' My family's white.
I was raised white. I'm Norwegian. I'm all mixed up."
Rodriguez, one of three students of color in the room, narrated matter-of-factly.
The boys whose names he never learned didn't change the way he saw himself,
or his place in his family. But they did alert him that others might see
him differently.
This February, while the nation celebrates Black History Month, Americans
again look back with mixed feelings. Proud of the progress made, we're
also deeply conflicted about the crimes of the past. Each February, though,
is a chance to approach the future with curiosity and a critical eye.
May 17 will mark the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education,
the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that "separate but equal"
wasn't. Within the next dozen years, the country's courts would hand down
rulings outlawing segregation in parks, libraries, hotels and restaurants,
on buses and, ironically, in the halls of justice themselves.
Overall, the mood is more personal this Black History Month, according
to leaders at the Association for the Study of African American Life and
History in Washington, D.C. The independent nonprofit group sets themes
for the annual celebration.
"It's a more emotional issue" this month, according to interim
executive director Sylvia Cyrus-Albritton. "That decision affected
people on a much different level than some of the other themes for Black
History Month. ... It just challenged the moral fabric of this country."
Today, sociologists study whether lessons taught early in intolerant households
can be undone, and how mixed-race music and movie stars can embody a new
standard of beauty while multicultural families such as Rodriguez's must
face slurs. The human reflex is to put away uncomfortable topics, hoping
they'll be easier to deal with down the road. So it's unclear whether
youths who say race doesn't matter are blissfully colorblind or naive
in their refusal to acknowledge differences.
"Little kids growing up don't know what color they are," Becky
Kelley told her Advanced Placement U.S. history class, of which Rodriguez
is a part. Also chairwoman of Washington's social studies department,
Kelley says "differences are to be celebrated but not at the exclusion
of other people."
One of her white students will experience the sensitive issue from a new
viewpoint in the fall. After the bell rang, a young woman who remained
quiet during the discussion told a friend that "it will be weird
being in the minority" when she goes to college. The student body
at the New York school she's chosen is 55 percent black, 20 percent Latino
and 7 percent white.
Locally, community leaders are preparing an advertising campaign to aggressively
counter racism and prevent hate crimes. The effort is a response to two
nights of fighting that broke out among white and black teens last October
- squirmishes many high schoolers think were overhyped by media, parents,
officials and members of the task force formed to address the issue.
"Everybody blew it way out of proportion," said Luke Sharpe,
a 17-year-old Washington senior in Kelley's class. "But it does give
us the opportunity to learn about other peoples' backgrounds, and I don't
know much about that."
Classmate Tim Zhu, a 16-year-old junior, found it interesting only because
"it brought some racist people out of the woodwork."
The silence that followed Rodriguez's story, however, revealed as much
as did his classmates' words. Kelley emphasizes that despite their various
cultures, every one of her students is American - or soon will be.
Senior David Ngor, 19, came to the United States from Sudan and soon will
become a naturalized citizen. He is a young black man in America, but
the black history taught here doesn't match his own. While he's acutely
aware of racial differences, he's still trying to reconcile a recent past
in which persecution followed religion, not skin color.
"When I came here, I was always eager to get in the discussion, and
I found I always had an opinion that seemed very different from anyone
else's," Ngor said. "What I was thinking was according to where
I came from, and people here had very different ideas."
Authors such as Brooke Kroeger and James McBride are cross-referencing
their own memories with accepted history to explore topics such as "passing"
- the racial deception that many light-skinned blacks practiced to gain
rights and privileges in an oppressive dominant culture following the
collapse of the Jim Crow laws.
Kroeger, a journalism professor at New York University, contends that
people of all backgrounds still pass: black for white, gay for straight,
poor for rich. Sometimes, a person reaches for the life she or he wants.
But in a newer trend, she offers, observers do the labeling, often misidentifying
someone and granting an unasked passing. Modern media extols the beauty
of racial ambiguity, the hiply blended look of Alicia Keys, Norah Jones,
Benjamin Bratt and Jennifer Lopez. But in practice, identity is more difficult
to find. Americans report that even the U.S. census' 126 racial and ethnic
combinations fall short of describing who they really are.
Cyrus-Albritton's organization hopes to give a sense of belonging to those
with African and African-American heritage. The D.C.-based group has its
roots in Chicago, where Carter G. Woodson founded the association with
five members. Born in 1875 to parents who had been slaves, high school
teacher Woodson was disappointed to discover schools didn't include the
history of black Americans.
Woodson founded the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History
in 1915. A little more than a decade later, he established Negro History
Week to include the birthdays of Frederick Douglass, an early African-American
abolitionist, and Abraham Lincoln, the president who signed the proclamation
making slavery illegal in the United States. The association that grew
from Woodson's circle held its first monthlong celebration in 1976.
At Memorial Middle School in Sioux Falls, teachers have worked Black History
Month into lesson plans or shared little-known facts when students themselves
chose prominent African-Americans for a bio-poster project.
Against the red walls of the school's Angus Hanson Learning Center, tagboard
profiles hang of Martin Luther King Jr. and other notables. Athletes and
entertainers were the most popular, with at least two Michael Jacksons
and three Michael Jordans in the mix.
Here, sixth-graders can recite the basics of the Emancipation Proclamation
and outline the importance of the Little Rock Nine, the first black students
to attend Central High School in Little Rock, Ark.
"I'd just ignore them (the jeering students)," 12-year-old Alex
Kumz said, trying to imagine what those nine felt like. "I'd keep
walking and be cool." He twists his right wrist, letting his fingers
glide in a smooth rippling motion, like a surfer talking about riding
a wave.
"But it would be so hard if they were yelling at you," countered
12-year-old Cassie TenCate. "I wouldn't like to go through that."
They switched quickly from black Americans in history to those with more
influence over their daily lives. Kumz talked about "my friend Tyler,
who had this awesome (Allen) Iverson jersey."
TenCate, too, talked up a friend. "I just thought, 'Wow, she's into
the same things I am,' and how she was really fun and had cool lip gloss,"
she said.
To Dana Kidd, 11, Black History Month is synonymous with Harriet Tubman
and the Underground Railroad. Classmate Jessica Johnson, also 11, added
Abraham Lincoln's name to the list.
So did Kelley, who got a chuckle from her Washington students when she
told them, "White guys get credit, too."
The bulk of it, as it turns out.
"We've been studying black history since 1926, but there's very little
to study because no one wrote about it," said Kelley, whose class
has worked its way up through the Reconstruction period after the Civil
War.
"Not all whites in the South were anti-black," she said. "Not
all blacks were anti-white. They'd lived together for generations. There
was a lot of understanding but also a lot of misconceptions and hatred."
Both ends of the emotional spectrum are evident in the film "Glory,"
which Kelley uses as a teaching tool. Denzel Washington earned his first
Oscar for his portrayal of a private in the 54th Massachusetts Infantry,
one of the first black Union regiments. Among the recruits were Lewis
N. Douglass and Charles Douglass, sons of Frederick Douglass.
Led by Robert Gould Shaw, a 26-year-old white colonel, the 54th led the
attack on Fort Wagner, in South Carolina. The regiment suffered heavy
casualties - Confederate soldiers buried Shaw in a mass grave along with
his men - but its uncommon valor made it a household name in the North
and helped spur black recruitment.
"It was a defeat for them but not for other black Americans,"
said Washington senior Sarah Walker, 17. "Maybe that's the only way
they could get the respect they deserved then. You can't really accept
people without knowing the extremes they're capable of."
Ngor, who experienced discrimination firsthand in his native Sudan, argues
for an equality without conditions of proof.
"It's not right to accept someone because they do something good,"
he said. "We all should be considered as human beings first."
The Associated Press and Knight-Ridder contributed to this report. Reach
reporter Jennifer Sanderson at 575-3629.
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