The Color Line
Subject: Your Article on the Tragic Mulatto
I grew in a segregated Louisiana as a mixed blooded person. There are
thousands of people there who share in the same heritage and the many of
those people, especially the more white or exotic looking ones, felt the
very pain of the "tragic mulatto." It was and is very real. A friend of
mine was in car with a bunch of white kids once and one of the white kids
made a black racial slur because he didn't know she wasn't white. She
wasn't passing she was just living. Imagine having to tell everyone you met
that you were a man if the world assumed you were a woman. You would
naturally assume that people knew you were what you were. I live in
California now and I have even met a couple of "white people" from New
Orleans that I know to be quadroons. It was never polite to call people out
on their identities for I have long held the belief that people should be
allowed to be who they want to be. Most mixed bloods are quite content
identifying with thinking of themselves as black but it is sometimes much
more challenging for people who group in mixed blooded communities to feel
the way.
I do love your website. I spoke to my children about Jim Crow and I them
told of the story of Homer Plessy. He of course was a white looking New
Orleanian who tried to sit in a whites only railcar. I don't know if they
will ever truly understand.
Jeffery L. Richard
Detachment Commander
-- Feb. 17, 2005
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