When completing open-ended responses, remember to use
RATE.
Prompt:
Going from her “all-white” world into the world with the
Boatwrights presented many revelations for Lily. Read this short bit about John
Griffin’s experience as a white man AND as an African American man.
Lee Harper wrote the famous line, “You never really
understand a person until you consider things from his point of view... Until
you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it” in the hugely famous To
Kill A Mockingbird in 1960.
Less than a year earlier, John Howard Griffin, a white
journalist, literally walked around in the skin of a Southern African American.
For a year, Griffin experienced the South’s African American and white
reactions to his skin color, mannerisms, and stereotypes.
At the age of 39, Griffin had already undertaken similar
experiments. Once, he became temporarily blind and lived in New Orleans. When
offered this new skin pigmentation experiment as a reaction to the alarmingly
high suicidal tendencies among the Southern African American population,
Griffin jumped on the unique opportunity.
After five days of skin pigmentation and exposure to sun
lamps, Griffin was shocked at the results. After looking in the mirror for the
first time he wrote, “The completeness of this transformation appalled me. It
was unlike anything I had imagined. I became two men, the observing one and the
one who panicked, who felt Negroid even into the depths of his entrails. I felt
the beginnings of great loneliness, not because I was a Negro, but because the
man I had been, the self I knew, was hidden in the flesh of another.”
Having walked through the New Orleans streets and ridden
the bus as a white man and an African American man, Griffin experienced a
variety of emotions. From the shoe shiner to the very same man who served him
coffee, Griffin realized “the real story is the universal story of men who
destroy the souls and bodies of other men for reasons neither really
understands.”
Thanks to his column and his book, Black Like Me, John
Howard Griffin opened the world’s eyes to the racism that surrounds us all.
Response
Requirement:
• How did
this article about John Griffin open your eyes to the experience of racism?
• Consider
this unit title “Cultural Chasms to Cross”—what “chasms” has Lily crossed in
her life?