Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Fighting for What is Right


The first two parts of The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittmann is a narration of Jane’s many adventures after acquiring her freedom; including the people she had met on her journeys, the homes she lived in, her various jobs, her and Ned’s achievements, and the bad experiences she had during that time. However, book three describes the social interactions and conditions of Jane’s surroundings in Samson.
            Chapter 25, “Samson”, starts with Jane’s desire to move far away from her house at the river due to the memories it brings her. As a response, Aunt Hattie Jordan tells her that even if she moved many miles, she would still be near memories because “memories was not a place, memories was in the mind” (161). This precise quote was important to my persona because sometimes when I experience a bad situation, I feel the urge of running away from the place and person that was involved in it. Never had I given any thought of how, even though I go away, the memory is still stuck in my head unable to be forgotten. Hattie’s words made me realize how we are played by our minds and get trapped in our conscience, finding it hard to let things go.
            Furthermore, the comparisons between Tee Bob and Timmy based on their racial differences angered me in great measure. Mostly, Robert Samson marked Tee Bob’s superiority over his brother because he was white and Timmy was black. “He knowed Timmy had to respect Miss Amma Dean just like he had to respect every white lady or white man” (180) are among the several opinions that evidence how Robert felt about his black son. A parent is supposed to love his child unconditionally and protect him from any harm, yet Mr. Samson denigrated his boy. Ever since I was a little girl, my family taught me to respect other’s beliefs, culture, race and sexual orientation; so seeing a father emotionally abusing his offspring offended me in a certain way.  
Moreover, this third book discussed the process by which white people keep bringing down the efforts of African Americans to succeed. In the chapter titled “Huey P. Long”, Jane depicts how Mr. Long was a man of the people. After he was killed, Pittman accused Caucasians of purposely terminating his life stating: “They killed him for helping the poor, the poor black and poor white /they thought the poor might rise” (190). There is a possibility of it being true as Ned was killed by the white people because of his determination of integrating them into society and getting them to stand up as Americans and human beings that deserved to be treated with dignity. Truth be told, they would not have felt the necessity of rising if society had accepted, or at least respected, the legal freedom granted to them by the Emancipation Proclamation. However, since they were still being denigrated and segregated it was up to them to fight for what was right.

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