Growing up Indian in a Predominately White World

691 Words2 Pages

One of the hardest realities of being a minority is that the majority has a thousand ways to hurt anyone who is part of a minority, and they have but two or three ways to defend themselves. In Sherman Alexie’s short story The Toughest Indian in the World, Roman Gabriel Fury is a member of the Native American minority that makes up less than two percent of the total United States population (1.2 percent to be exact). This inherent disadvantage of being a minority, along with various cultural factors, influences the conflicted character of Roman Gabriel Fury and his attitudes toward the white majority. Through his use of strong language, demanding tone, and vibrant colors, Roman Gabriel Fury is able to reveal his complex feelings about growing up Indian in a predominately white world.
Language, when used correctly, can be an immensely powerful weapon. Roman’s knowledge of sophisticated language is one of his strongest attributes, as he makes it immediately known that “he wanted to be the first one to use a word actually found in Webster’s Dictionary, Ninth Edition” after Mr. Williams mutters “’Hmmm’ as if the guttural were an important part of his vocabulary.” Roman is proud of the irony that, although both of his parents are deceased and his grandmother does not speak English, the Indian appears to be more sophisticated than the white man. Roman further uses his strong language to express his awareness of the victimization of his ethnicity. For example, when Mr. Williams “compliments” Roman on his near-perfect score on the math section of the CAT by saying that it is “the second-highest score ever for a Native American,” Roman responds with “Normally, I’d say thank you, sir, but I don’t think that was a sincere compliment was it?...

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...ial bland, white, powerless male; nothing is present that distinguishes Mr. Williams from the rest of the seemingly dominant white society. Roman, on the other hand, despite the fact that he lives in poverty, possesses more liveliness and power than Mr. Williams could ever possess. For instance, Roman shows up to take the CAT wearing his “red, yellow, white, and blue grass-dance outfit” because Roman’s grandmother “told [him Mr. William’s] test was culturally biased and that [he] might need a little extra power to do [his] best.” Unlike Mr. Williams, Roman recognizes the power that color possesses, even after death, for Roman vividly remembers “the yellow headlights of the red truck that smashed head-on into his father’s blue Chevy,” his mother’s “red blood coughed into the folds of a white handkerchief,” and the fact that his mother “was buried in a purple dress.”

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