c.
2017 Rod Ice
All
rights reserved
(8-17)
Charlottesville,
Virginia.
Another
point on the map. Another community name which suddenly has new
meaning for citizens across America. A tragic and painful meaning.
Much
has already been written about James Alex Fields Jr. and his horrific
car-strike into a crowd protesting against white nationalists who had
gathered at a local rally. A rally in which he was a participant.
Many thoughts have been offered about how to deal with the persistent
stain of such groups, and what sort of leadership we expect from our
elected officials when considering their hatred.
But
for this writer, the story evoked a personal reflection. One from my
own past, in central Virginia, around 1970.
In
that distant time, I was a child, barely nine years old. Our
neighbors were a mother and her adult daughter, both widowed and
living quietly on our middle-class street. A dark Mercury Marquis sat
in their driveway. Curiously, I noted that the car rarely seemed to
move. My first job was to mow their lawn every week, at the
compensation of four dollars per visit. I loved them both.
For
someone born in Ohio, however, living in the Old Dominion presented
cultural differences from what I considered familiar. The accent was
much more southern than I had heard before. My family members and I
were labeled ‘Yankees,’ a term I associated with Major League
Baseball, not regional heritage. Another neighbor even displayed the
‘Stars & Bars’ on their flagpole, not ‘Old Glory.’ (What
most call, in generic terms, the ‘Confederate Flag.’) Still, the
people were genteel and friendly. And I loved the climate. The
religious nature of my own brood fit well with the prevailing outlook
of the city.
Mrs.
N (the adult daughter) and Mrs. M (the white-haired mother) were
ideal residents. Kind and unobtrusive. We sometimes visited because
they had a color television, something my family would not afford
until the 1980’s. Our conversations were polite to a fault. They
carefully avoided subjects like the Vietnam conflict, drugs,
promiscuity or hippie rebellion. Especially when I, a young kid, was
in the room.
But
on one occasion, this dependable standard of decorum was shattered
when a TV news report spoke about interracial marriage. In highbrow
terms, miscegenation. Mrs. M shook her snowy locks with disgust at
the thought of such biological mixing. “I can’t stand such a
thing!” she observed. “No sir! Not in my neighborhood.”
Being
a precocious kid with a tendency to overstep the norms of conduct for
someone my age, I blurted out that a woman in the Christian Bible was
given leprosy because she murmured against a union of this kind.
Silence and shock filled the air as I repeated a scripture I had
heard in church:
Numbers,
Chapter 12: (1-10) “And Miriam and Aaron spake against Moses
because of the Ethiopian woman whom he had married; for he had
married an Ethiopian woman. 2 And they said, Hath the Lord indeed
only spoken by Moses? Hath he not spoken also by us? And the Lord
heard it. 3 Now the man Moses was very meek, above all the men which
were upon the face of the earth. 4 And the Lord spake suddenly unto
Moses, and unto Aaron, and unto Miriam, Come out ye three unto the
tabernacle of the congregation. And they three came out. 5 And the
Lord came down in the pillar of the cloud, and stood in the door of
the tabernacle, and called Aaron and Miriam: and they both came
forth. 6 And he said, Hear now my words: If there be a prophet among
you, I the Lord will make myself known unto him in a vision, and will
speak to him in a dream. 7 My servant Moses is not so, who is
faithful in all mine house. 8 With him I will speak mouth to mouth,
even apparently, and not in dark speeches; and the similitude of the
Lord shall he behold: wherefore then were ye not afraid to speak
against my servant Moses? 9 And the anger of the Lord was kindled
against them; and he departed. 10 And the cloud departed from off the
tabernacle; and, behold, Miriam became leprous, white as snow: and
Aaron looked upon Miriam, and, behold, she was leprous.”
Leprosy was the punishment given by God for the sin of racism, I
declared.
Mrs. M. stood up suddenly. She was shaken by my comments. Without
another word, she left the room. Her daughter followed, shouting
apologies. “Mama, he doesn’t understand! He just doesn’t
understand!” I was left alone on their couch. The television
continued to play to itself. I felt awkward and guilty. And very
confused. Finally, I left their living room and returned to my own
home, next door.
Only later did I confess this happening to my parents. They explained
that while I may have surprised our senior neighbor with my childhood
sophistication and command of scripture, I was correct. There was no
excuse for prejudice.
This memory has lingered ever since. Like a surreal tale of yonder
days that modern folk would find difficult to believe. An oddity of
past bias. A shadow long forgotten with the sunrise of a brighter
day. Something I thought would have disappeared like the dinosaurs.
Until now. Until Charlottesville.
Comments
or questions about ‘Words on the Loose’ may be sent to:
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Published
weekly in the Geauga Independent
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