I find myself shaking my head at the comments proclaiming that blacks would be free from all vestiges of racism if we would simply get over our nasty habit of separating ourselves in places like BlackVoices.com, BET, the NAACP and so on.To those complaining, many times asking, "What if there were a White Voices?" Black Voices is what segregation looks like.
So, I certainly hope our readers who think this way (you know who you are) will spearhead a letter-writing or call-in campaign to Montgomery County, Ga., where a very disturbing type of real-world segregation is going on. ...
You see, the white students there hold a "whites only" high school prom that black students are not allowed to attend. This year, in 2009, and for many decades past, this has been the tradition.
In response, the following night, black students hold their own prom to which everyone is invited. Few, if any, white students show up, though. Because if they did, those white kids would be defying their parents.
An article in the New York Times lays it all out:
Students of both races say that interracial friendships are common at Montgomery County High School. Black and white students also date one another, though often out of sight of judgmental parents. "Most of the students do want to have a prom together," says Terra Fountain, a white 18-year-old who graduated from Montgomery County High School last year and is now living with her black boyfriend. "But it's the white parents who say no. They're like, if you're going with the black people, I'm not going to pay for it."Source: New York Times, In Georgia, Segregation Endures on Prom Night
"It's awkward," acknowledges JonPaul Edge, a senior who is white. "I have as many black friends as I do white friends. We do everything else together. We hang out. We play sports together. We go to class together. I don't think anybody at our school is racist." Trying to explain the continued existence of segregated proms, Edge falls back on the same reasoning offered by a number of white students and their parents. "It's how it's always been," he says. "It's just a tradition."
What saddened me most when I read about Montgomery County High School was the fact that somehow the white and black kids feel powerless to change the racial situation they face.
I don't know what U.S. high school students are learning in civics classes these days, but if they don't recognize the fundamental power they have in shaping the destiny of our country, then our democratic future is very gloomy.
There's more:
When the actor Morgan Freeman offered to pay for last year's first-of-its-kind integrated prom at Charleston High School in Mississippi, his home state, the idea was quickly embraced by students -- and rejected by a group of white parents, who held a competing "private" prom. (The effort is the subject of a documentary, 'Prom Night in Mississippi,' which will air on HBO in July.)More Discussion in Community
+ Segregated Prom '09
+ Segregated Proms, What Planet Am I On?
+ Go to Prom, Get Suspended
Vintage Racist Advertising
Top left LOS ANGELES - DECEMBER 1: Brigitte Nielsen and Flavor Flav present onstage at the VH1 - Big in '04 on December 1, 2004 at the Shrine Auditorium, in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images) Top right: 1899 -- Uncle Tom's Cabin: Topsy Illustration --- Image by © CORBIS; Bottom right: 1930s AC spark plugs ad in The Saturday Evening Post -- Photo by The Authentic History Center; Bottom left: This cartoon image provided by the New York Post appeared in the Post's Page Six Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2009. The cartoon, which refers to Travis the chimp, who was shot to death by police in Stamford, Conn. on Monday after it mauled a friend of its owner, drew criticism Wednesday on media Web sites and from civil rights activist the Rev. Al Sharpton. (AP Photo/New York Post) ** NO SALES ** Credit: Getty Images / Corbi / Authentic History Center / AP
Getty Images / Corbi / Authentic History Center / AP
Advertisement for an African-American slave sale.
Although the enslavement of mankind in general has been recorded as early as 1200 BC; the first African slaves were reportedly transported to the 'New World' in 1517. This is 76 years after the first black slaves were captured and taken to Portugal.
Bettmann / Corbis
African American Stereotypes: Products and Advertising c.1880s Tin of Nigger Hair Tobacco
For decades this product was sold in stores as chewing tobacco or for smoking. It was advertised as 'pure, unadulterated, fine old burley leaf.'
Photo Source: The Authentic History Center
The Authentic History Center
1888 -- Seal of North Carolina Tobacco - The Darktown Bowling Club Poster -- Image by © Swim Ink 2, LLC/CORBIS Seal of North Carolina Tobacco - The Darktown Bowling Club Poster
Swim Ink 2, LLC / Corbis
ca. 1890 -- Zoulou Powder Poster (French advertisement)
Because offensive advertising was permeated throughout the world for many years, (and still is, as you will see in a few upcoming slides) it should come as no surprise that in more modern times 'racism has become the scourge of European soccer stadiums.'
Swim Ink 2, LLC / Corbis
ca. 1899 --- Uncle Tom's Cabin: Topsy Illustration --- Image by © CORBIS Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe
Topsy was a stereotypical pickaninny character in the book, 'Uncle Tom's Cabin.' Uncle Tom was a slave in the book. The term 'Uncle Tom' is recognized to be offensive and a derogatory name for a black man who is abjectly servile and deferential to whites.
Corbis
ca. 1899 --- George Thatcher's Greatest Minstrels Poster --- Image by © CORBIS George Thatcher's Greatest Minstrels Poster
Early definition of minstrel: a medieval poet and musician who sang or recited while accompanying himself on a stringed instrument, either as a member of a noble household or as an itinerant troubadour.
The black-face minstrel act was a very popular form of entertainment in 19th-century America. White audiences were receptive to the portrayals of Blacks as singing, dancing, grinning fools. T.D. 'Daddy' Rice, the original Jim Crow, became rich and famous because of his skills as a minstrel. Interestingly though, when he died in New York on September 19, 1860, he was broke.
Corbis
African American Stereotypes: Products and Advertising 1899 Durkee's Salad Dressing advertisement, Harpers Magazine
Notice the broken English purportedly spoken by black Americans, 'We're gwine ter live high ter-night ...'
Photo Source: The Authentic History Centerr
The Authentic History Center
Advertisement for Clarence Brooks and Co.'s Fine Coach Varnishes uses racist stereotypes to depict a group of African-American adults and children as they cheer and watch two shirtless boxers, one of whom appears unconscious, accompanied by the text "the Championship Fight, Sullivan Wins," late 1800s. The Sullivan in the text is a reference to boxer John L. Sullivan, who fought bare-knuckled in several famous bouts.
Transcendental Graphics, Getty Images
Advertisement for the St. Louis Beef Canning Company features an illustration of a stereotyped African-American character sitting on a can of beef, accompanied by phonetically rendered, stereotypical dialect-style text that reads: 'No Sah! dont jine no Exodus so as dis Beef lasts,' late 1800s.
Showing blacks to massacre the English language, further perpetuated the false idea that African Americans were somehow unable to be educated.
Transcendental Graphics, Getty Images


Comments: (3550)
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By: JTB on 6/17/2009 3:54PM
For the people who wrote that African Americans(AA)
shouldn't have their own things. I would suggest you study the history of this country in which white people wrote laws and made policies that made it where AA couldn't attend schools, buy or work at businesses, or have positive images of themselves in the media thus we were forced to get our "own things" for our survival. The history books show that you took us from our land, striped our culture, and destroyed our family, yet you are angry at us. While you are reading the history book I suggest you read the bible, hopefully, it will soften your heart because we are all God's children.
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By: SA girl on 6/16/2009 8:28PM
I think Black Americans are still sooo traumatized and culturally disoriented as a result of their history in America, the ghost of racism lies behind every shadow. PTSD
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By: Jesse on 6/16/2009 11:45PM
The explanation that the white parents are the problem sounds overly simple. Since when did all teenagers mind their parents about prom night? There is more to this and it is unfortunate the article didn't go farther.
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By: uabdiva on 6/17/2009 11:26AM
SOME OF YOU READERS ARE SO IGNORANT. HOW CAN YOU COMPARE BLACK ONLY ORGANIZATIONS TO WHITE ONLY ORGS? THOSE TYPES OF ORGS WERE A REACTION TO PROBLEMS PRESENTED BY WHITE PEOPLE. WHITES WOULDNT LET BLACKS GO TO SCHOOL SO, WE TAUGHT EACH OTHER. WHITES WOULDNT LET BLACKS PARTICIPATES IN THEIR PAGENTS / CONTESTS, SO WE MADE OUR OWN. WHITES WOULD NOT FUND A HIGHER EDUCATION FOR BLACKS, THUS THE NAACP FORMED. I FEEL NO NEED TO GO ON WITH EXAMPLES. WE DID NOT FORMULATE THESE GROUPS, ORG., CONTESTS, SOCIAL EVENTS, ETC. TO EXCLUDE WHITES, THEY WERE FORMED BECAUSE WE WERE ALL THAT WE HAD. IF WE AS A RACE OF PEOPLE DID NOT LOOK OUT FOR EACH OTHER, BAND TOGETHER AND HELP EACH OTHER OUT THEN WE WOULD HAVE NOT MADE IT PRAYING & WAITING ON THE WHITE MAN SO READ A BOOK AND STOP BEING SO NIEVE!!!
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By: gibby on 6/18/2009 4:43PM
This story and the comments following it are so sad. White people, we do have our own networks. They're called ABC, CBS and NBC. We do have our own clubs. They are called country clubs and church. We do have our own scholarships, they just have tricky names and don't usually mention race directly. And we even have our own pageant. It's called Miss America, but ga'll darnit, a black woman slips in every once and a while, and somebody forgets to tell the judges, and she wins. And how can you compare the United Negro College Fund and the KKK. When did the UNCF ever kill anyone? Back to the high school prom, what a tough place these kids are in. They spend five days a week with each other and because they have ignorant parents, they are forced into a awkward situation. I hope that they realize that they do have the power to make it right one day. And I think they will. Maybe I am living in a bubble but I think our society is getting better, even if it baby steps. We have to remember that it just wasn't that long ago that a black could not vote and now we have a multi-racial president. It may sound morbid but I think with every generation that dies off, we become a more open and accepting society. I recently became a first time father and I can't wait to see my daughter's generation and their attitudes toward race and gender issues.
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By: Don't Worry on 6/18/2009 11:59PM
The reason why there are black colleges, pagents, stores, networks, and etc is b/c our hair is different from whites so we need certain products, you don't have many black orietented shows on tv, and many black people struggle with getting into college. So we are not segeregated ourseleves we are helping society by helping ourselves. Everyone always complains about how blacks are lazy. Please SHUT UP...There are also other minority shows lie MTV tres, and hispanic scholarships. Stop being ignorant. Anyone can be rascist the color of your skin does not matter
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By: dinkkus on 6/19/2009 11:56AM
One thing to keep in mind is that evetually this will become a non issue.
I am forty raised in the south by a family all from the north. I had black friends though I did not singles them out as that.
When I dated it was unthinkable to cross "party lines" it is now for the next generation a non issue.I didn't avoid a black date I just was never asked.
When these children in the movie have children I think it will be a different story.
It would be nice to think that individuals will wake up and put their past thoughts and fears aside. I think that is why we continue to have children to evolve as a society to get better.
How long did it take for the Jews and Christians to love and get along 2000 years? I know that it is much better now than it was in the early 60's.
That's all I can speak about since I wasn't around longer.
I look forward to the day that we celebrate our differences, but pull together as a nation.
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By: Joanna on 6/21/2009 10:04PM
As for white people complaining about organizations such as NAACP.... I am white and I do volunteer work with the NAACP. College organizations? I was a member of the Black Student Union and almost pledged a "Black" sorority. The Black groups I have come across have been inclusive of any white person who wanted to join and support the cause of Equal Rights and fight against racism. White organizations are the ones that have let people of color in reluctantly, and then only after the threat of litigation in most cases.
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By: Joanna on 6/24/2009 12:09AM
Oh, and another thing... if the white students in this school really cared about their Black friends, they would refuse to go to a segregated prom and boycott it totally.
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By: Wondering on 7/26/2009 2:38PM
Does anyone know what happened this past year? I know the documentary aired this month in 2009 but the prom was held in 2008. What was the 2009 prom? Were there still two?
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