Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Multi-Racial Read #7: The Color of Love



Sometimes there are books that speak for themselves. The Color of Love an autobiography of Gene Creek, "a blue-collar son of the South" is one of these. Gene's life-journey is noteworthy for one significant reason: in the Jim Crow South his mother, rejected by her alcoholic husband, fell in love with a black man. This book is the story that documents the life-changing events which then Gene experienced.


Gene recreated his family history as best as possible. Here are some excerpts:


Advice which he received from his maternal grandmother when Gene admitted to hating his father:
"Mean he is," Grandma said. "But you shouldn't hate him for it. People who hate other people are miserable people. There's enough hate in this world already, honey, especially here in the South. White people hate the colored and the colored hate the black." p. 127


When his mother revealed her love:
"You could have knocked me over with a feather. It was 1961; we lived in...the heart of Dixie. I knew to the southern man there was no greater sin than race mixing. The prevailing views of most white southerners concerning blacks where not news to me. I knew that the majority of the white world--including my father--considered blacks less than human." p. 145


"To me it boiled down to one simple issue: mama loved me, I loved her, and she loved this man [Tuck]. I'd heard it said in church. 'You have to walk it like you talk it.'... 'If you love this man and he loves you, then the color of his skin doesn't matter,' I said to Mama." p. 148


Reflecting on his anxieties the first visit to Tuck's house:
"On the night of my first visit with Tuck, I was as nervous as a cat in a room full of rocking chairs...A black man with a white woman and a white boy? Where could we go together that wouldn't trigger threats and admonishments and probable violence? We couldn't eat at a downtown restaurant or shop at the department store or stroll in the park together." p. 157


When white teenagers were harassing Tuck and his mother:
"'Don't worry, Tuck said. 'They can't do anything to us as long as we're in the car.' Somehow he remained calm. It occurred to me that this was nothing new to him. Getting cussed and chased by white men was just a way of life for most black men in the South." p. 164


A talk with Tuck:
"Tuck and I talked while Mama made supper. 'You know, I love America. I fought for this country during World War II. When we were fighting against the Nazis, I figured that we were fighting for freedom. We believed that we when we came back home we'd be treated as equals. But that didn't happen. In fact, in some ways it got worse. We couldn't even wear our uniforms in public when we got back. When I was discharged in 1946 the people at Fort Bragg told us not to leave the base in our uniforms because blacks were being beaten and stripped of their medals and even the buttons on their coats." p. 168

At the hearing when Gene was taken away from his mother after his step-brother, Randy, was born:
"What choice did she have? Had she admitted the truth--that Tuck was the Negro father of her son--she would be confessing to a felony according to North Carolina's anti-miscegenation laws. And if she was convicted of a felony, she and Tuck faced prison, and what would happen to Randy and me?" p. 209

Gene, Tuck, and Randy, 1962


********

This true story may seem unbelievable to those who are younger than I am. To be honest, as a person who grew up during this time period in the North, I also shook my head many times in disbelief. Gene's mother and Tuck were married in 1979--six years after North Carolina repealed the anti-miscegenation law. By then, I had graduated from college with no clue how one day I would be touched by this story. 


Gene concludes the book with his honest confession:


"While writing this book, I did gain understanding, and with it came forgiveness, but I have not forgotten. The facts are this will remain a part of my life, as long as there is life. I'm not sure complete healing is attainable. I don't think I will ever forget, and I'm not sure I should." p. 258

I, for one, am glad you didn't, Gene.

13 comments:

Joyce Moyer Hostetter said...

Oh my! It hurts to read this stuff! I am reading The Warmth of Other Suns for my next book club selection. It is so painful!

I wonder sometimes how blacks survived those years.

Carol Baldwin said...

Agreed. Just finished Dangerous Skies (I think I'll have to blog about that next week) which takes place in 1991. Way too close for comfort. But then, perhaps thats the point. We shouldn't be comfortable at all.

Linda A. said...

Sounds like an extrordinary book and a topic that should be remembered.

Linda A.

Carol Baldwin said...

Thanks, Linda. The more I read and learn, the more I realize what I need to learn.

Anonymous said...

I have to read this book. I have to get it and let my friends read this book.

Carol Baldwin said...

DOnna, I got it through the public library.

Edupreneur said...

It is humbling to be shown, yet again, that we humans are far from being as wise and wonderful as we think we are. I'd like to build a school curriculum around stories like this. Perhaps we can inspire our children to "be the difference."

Carol Baldwin said...

Thank you, Edupraneur, for your comment. I would like to hear more ideas about using stories like this for a curriculum. Email me at cbaldwin6@carolina.rr.com and let's get talking!

Young Authors Program said...

Carol, this sounds like an amazing book. The
history that is unleashed within the pages of
books like this are truly awe-inspiring!

Carol Baldwin said...

Dorothy, you are right on!

Clara Gillow Clark said...

WOW! I have to get this book. No, I have to order multiple copies of this book. Thanks for sharing, Carol!

Carol Baldwin said...

Thanks, Clara. I know Gene will be happy to hear how his book is reaching other people.

Jean said...

Sounds like a heart-wrenching story, Carol. I, too, grew up in the South in the 50s and 60s. I can well imagine how this family was treated.


Thanks,
Jean
www.write2ignite.com

PUSH-PULL MORNING: Dog Powered Poems About Matter and Energy

I wouldn't have believed that a book about matter and energy would be read by the picture book crowd, except that my third-grade and kin...