African American
Related: About this forum‘I KNOW THIS IS NOT A BLACK WORLD’
MILWAUKEE, WIS. On weekday afternoons, Gaulien Gee Smith, a prominent Milwaukee barber and businessman, walks out of the Gees Clippers shop on North Doctor Martin Luther King Dr., steps into his shiny new limited-edition pickup truck, and begins the 20-minute drive to a parallel universe.
He heads north. Past vacant lots and vacant storefronts. Past the boundary of the citys north side, where almost all of his customers and almost everybody else is black. He crosses into the suburb of Glendale. The stares begin.
Glendale is home to an Apple Store and a Brooks Brothers and a Swarovski. And white people. A whole lot of white people. Smith, a charismatic 45-year-old black man with a salt-and-pepper goatee, doesnt need the probing eyes as a reminder.
The white people are why hes there in the first place.
Smith makes the trip across the invisible race border to pick up two of his sons, one from a private school and one from an elite public school. He chose the schools, in part, for their whiteness.
I refused to ever send my child to an all-black school, he said. Because I know this is not a black world.
He has considerable authority on the subject. He has spent his whole life in Milwaukee, the most segregated place in America.
Segregation. The word conjures images of the Deep South, a Jim Crow past of snarling police dogs and whites-only toilets. In fact, it is a national problem that has long outlasted the era of openly racist law. It persists, five decades after the U.S. government passed the anti-discrimination Fair Housing Act. It persists under the countrys first black president. It persists in a place barely farther south than Toronto.
It feels like sometimes, in some ways, when you come to Milwaukee, you went back in time 60 years, said Ansaar Gandy, 29, a black bartender and demolition worker.
Milwaukee itself is deeply divided, its road overpasses serving as racial barriers. But the most startling divide is between the city and its suburbs.
http://startouch.thestar.com/screens/3831ae7b-5532-4020-87e9-ae6a99382ab9%7Cc95MltWrB~XU.html
Number23
(24,544 posts)of my ENTIRE life. Having that strong, fierce knowledge of who I am and where I came from is one of the things that has given me the courage to see as much of the world that I have.
I know how segregated communities came to be and it is a stain on this country. But as someone who grew up in extremely segregated environments, I found so much of myself in them. There are positives to the negatives.
I refused to ever send my child to an all-black school, he said. Because I know this is not a black world.
As pissed as I may be at this guy, most of my emotion is going towards his children. My heart breaks for them.