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Black Like Me By John Howard Griffin

Good Essays

LeeLa Robinson
Mr. Calver
American Literature: Period 5
May 10, 2016
A Mile in their Shoes
“Your blanks have been filled in far differently from those of a child grown up in the filth and poverty” (Griffin 46). In Black Like Me, author John Howard Griffin travels to the South to dye his skin brown to live as a black man, throughout Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia. During the height of the 1950’s Civil Rights Movement, Griffin came up with the idea of medically dying his skin brown so he could travel the South and experience the racism blacks were fighting so hard against. He was surprised by the everyday things he could not do anymore in fear of being arrested or even worse. The idea of being a second class citizen had hit him as his rights to even use the bathroom were taken away. In the end, he could finally grasp the concept of what racism was like and was disgusted by the ignorance of the white people who ignored or proactively participated in the act. The racism faced during the 1950’s was during the peak of the Civil Rights Movement. Almost 90 years later after being freed the uphill battle on equality had come farther than ever when leaders such as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Nelson Mandela, W.E.B Du Bois, Rosa Parks, and others had had enough. People of color were second class citizens as many still are today. The government, who emancipated and gave these minorities their rights, no longer focuses on the topic of racial equality, because it

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