Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin

806 Words2 Pages

In the novel Black Like Me by John Howard Griffin, Griffin is a white man who went under medical surgery to change his skin color to black in order to get a first hand look into the life of a negro. This novel takes place in the nineteen-fifties and Griffin travels various southern states and experiences the true power of racism towards blacks. During this period of traveling Griffin stops in Mississippi where he truly realizes what it is like to be a Negro. Griffin had trouble comprehending the degree of tension when it came to racial prejudice in Mississippi because the tension was so great. He also was able to realize the deep bond blacks had together as a race, because the majority of blacks had all the same or similar experiences when it came to racial prejudice. His novel was driven by his experiences in Mississippi and was written in detail to give the reader a true feeling of the racial tensions he experienced in the southern states.

Griffin's first encounter with racism was at a bus stop in Mississippi. The driver was stopping in order to give a ten minute break to the passengers on the bus. The whites stood and got off the bus first and as Griffin and his companion Bill tried to led the blacks off the driver stood in their way. Bill ignores the driver and slips under him because he had to use the restroom. The driver stops Bill and does not allow him to leave the bus. In an instant the blacks sit back into their seats knowing that it would be pointless to try and leave for their break. The driver was nasty and rude and demanded Bill get back on the bus.

The driver was denying them of their human rights. The driver then goes further in his assault by making the blacks urinate and poop in the bus. Not only di...

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...d. Supporting each other and creating friendships with other blacks seemed to ease the pain. They found balance in their hostile world through words of kindness and compassion. Griffin realized the mental strength that blacks must have to be so calm and collective while the rest of the world spits in their faces for being half a human being.

At the end of Griffin's journey through the south, he is left in awe and disbelief about how blacks were treated. He went out of his way to undertake a dangerous task in order to open the eyes of his readers on such topics as racial prejudice and civil rights. The racial tension and ignorance he faced made him truly realize the horrors blacks had to face everyday. Through his novel he exposes the south and there unjust ways as well as educating the clueless public of the real life situations faced everyday by blacks.

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