Growing up in Coleridge, the other children of the world were only seen in pictures. We depended on National Geographic to show and tell us about other people and peoples. Reader’s Digest brought us new words each month. We tried to guess their meaning and in the process we learned some new words too.
I can remember when one of those words was prejudice. I had never heard the word. I learned its meaning when I saw black people having to go around to the back entrance of a restaurant to be served. When I asked Mom about it, she told me what they were doing. Of course, “why” came next. Why did they have to do that? She said that was just the way it was.
We rarely ever went to a restaurant. You called them cafes then. And when we did go we sat in the car and Dad went in. He’d get eight hotdogs. There were seven of us in the family – that meant two hotdogs for him and one each for Mom and the rest of us kids. Those were probably the best hotdogs in the world. Somehow even though I was just a little girl I knew that those people going to the back entrance of the café was different than us having to sit in the car, “‘cause that was the way it was.” I can remember thinking that it didn’t seem right.
It wasn’t long after that when the kids that met the bus at the crossroads, the black kids, rode the same bus I rode to school. Integration was another new word I learned. It brought with it the idea that being created equal, we could share the ride home, the classroom, the same hopes and aspirations. While the nation and the south in particular experienced turbulence at that time, it wasn’t a big deal at Coleridge School.
Recently I heard someone tell a Sunday School class that Jesus Loves the Little Children should go like this: Jesus loves the little children, all the children of the world, red, yellow, black, brown and white, they are precious in his sight. The teacher went on to say that in the original version a whole group of people was being left out.
Can we afford to leave anyone out? I think not! Did I realize as a child when I sang that that I was leaving anyone out. No, I didn’t but I do now. With Reader’s Digest I increased my word power, and I learned a lot about life and living. The word tolerance, used as a noun describes how I want to be. It means a fair objective and permissive attitude toward those whose opinions, practices, race, religion, nationality, politics is different than my own.
The question again – can we afford to leave anyone out? No, a thousand times no. I do think sometimes it’s not the race of a person that is disagreeable but maybe the person themselves. Who’s to say that there hasn’t been times when I’ve rubbed someone the wrong way or I’ve been cantankerous. You can’t blame all Caucasians (which aren’t really white) for my bad attitude.
People – it’s the way we are, not always pleasing in God’s sight or to our fellow man. While there is room for improvement we would all have to admit that we have come a long way. In today’s world we see red, yellow, brown, black and white people and mixes of each. They are the colors of us and we all matter!
Simply Sandy is written by Sandy Jarrell and appears the first Wednesday of each month. Simply put, it’s Sandy waxing wordy once a month about life as she knows it. Jarrell is a native and life-long resident of Coleridge and a librarian at Ramseur Public Library. She can be reached by e-mail at wjarrell@rtmc.net
Voices
SImply Sandy – October 2009
- Voices
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- Mr. Movie: Can magicians do all of that?
- Jody Terry: Community pitches in
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Larry Penkava: Deer me!
Deer are making themselves at home in Gopher Woods.
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Mr. Movie: Marilyn Monroe
The short, unhappy life of Norma Jean Baker, a/k/a Marilyn Monroe, has been well documented. She was married to Joe DiMaggio and to playwright Arthur Miller.
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Mr. Movie: Princess Grace Kelly
Hollywood has produced one real-life Princess in Grace Kelly.
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Larry Penkava: Ila Mae goes home
Ila Mae Williams can rest in peace.
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Larry Penkava: Asheboro in the spotlight
Asheboro’s Sunset (Avenue, not Boulevard) was the scene last Friday of cameras, sound booms, cables strung all over the streets and dozens of crew members acting like ants on a catered pizza slice dumped on the sidewalk.
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Larry Penkava: Group hugs available
Maybe what we all need is a big hug. Times are hard, don’tcha know. The economy stinks, we’re in a never-ending war and Lindsay Lohan is looking at jail time.
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Mr. Movie: Patricia Neal
Patricia Neal died at the good old age of 84. Experts said she should have been dead 40 years ago.
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Larry Penkava: Roaches as a miracle drug?
Where the roaches are when you really need them?
- More Voices Headlines



