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Analysis Of Rosa Parks, An African American Activist For Racial Equality

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Another Aspect of Education “Racism is still with us. But it is up to us to prepare our children for what they have to meet, and, hopefully, we shall overcome” (Rosa Parks). Rosa Parks, an African American activist for racial equality, stated this in hopes that older generations will teach equality to the younger people of American society. Racial discrimination is commonly thought of as a historic issue that has been largely resolved in today’s day and age. Since slavery was abolished in the United States in the mid-1800s, many people choose to regard inequality as a past issue. However, racism since then has continued in society and has been taught to every following generation. Present in the mid-1900s, nearly one-hundred years …show more content…

Since it was a social norm to treat blacks as inferior and with utter disrespect, it encourages the white children to continue to exert dominance over the black boys. Later, once the white boy tells his father that Lee beat him up, the boys and their father unwelcomingly barge into Lee’s home and demand for him to apologize. Uncle Sam, Lee’s uncle, pleads, “Tell the baas and young basies how sorry you are, Lee” (6). Uncle Sam’s pleading represents the control that whites, both men and boys, had over blacks in this time period. As the white children watch their father pressures Lee into apologizing, they sees an example of how they themselves should treat Africans. Once Lee avoids apologizing, Uncle Sam is pressured and nearly forced by the white father into beating Lee. By this point “Uncle Sam went into the other room and returned with a thick leather thong. He wound it once round his hand and advanced…The man and the boys leaned against the door, watching” (6). The white males further assert their dominance over the blacks in this situation because they essentially force Uncle Sam to beat his own family member. As the boys watch, they learn that having prejudice and discriminating over blacks is approved and even easy. The experience that the white boys underwent “carefully taught” them the ways in which to treat the black members of their society. The white men in “Crackling Day” by Peter Abrahams express their disrespect towards

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