The Minuteman

The Official Newark Academy Newspaper

The Racial Divide, as perceived at NA

By Zoe Huber-Weiss ’13, Staff Writer

In my AP United States History class, we are currently studying the origin and practice of the “Jim Crow” laws, which legally segregated the United States. Given that I am the daughter of a civil rights lawyer, my growing knowledge of our country’s past blatant racist legal practices disturbed me. It was preposterous for me to think of forcefully ejecting a black man from a train for sitting in a “white” car, as was the basis for the famous 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson Supreme Court case. In this case, the court made a “separate but equal” ruling that became the basis for legal segregation.

Segregation would be unthinkable in today’s society and is thought of, by most Americans, as a dark point in our nation’s history. However, as I ranted about the outrageousness of the idea in class, I realized that my righteous condemnation of nineteenth and twentieth century America might not be well-founded. Now, this is not to say that I or anyone I know are on the same level as those who made and upheld the laws of segregation, and I certainly do not mean to imply that nor to offend anyone. That being said, it must be acknowledged that our society today is not 100% integrated.

Not only is Newark Academy (and other private schools similar to it) predominantly white, but races are separated within the school itself. Many of the people who I consider to be friends are African-American, and yet, I never sit with them at lunch. Especially among girls, friend groups are racially divided in a way that makes me cringe. In the sophomore class, comprising of one hundred and six people, there are only nine African-American students; already, this must create a feeling of difference, of standing outside of the norm.

The fact that this difference is accented by the social workings of our school, simply a microcosm of society, reveals a major flaw in our society. This is not to say that our school as an entity is bad, because I am sure that this phenomenon is mirrored in other independent and public schools in our area.  The negative economic effects of subjugating Black people in the past are undisputed, so it stands to reason that these effects be evident in the admittedly affluent world of private school.  This means that there is all the more reason to try to stop the racial divide in related social situations.

Again, I am not accusing anyone of racism, and I admit that I do not know the cause of or the solution to this problem. However, our community must become aware of this situation if we are to move as far away as possible from segregation, a significant blight on our country’s historical record.


Comments

2 responses to “The Racial Divide, as perceived at NA”

  1. Carissa Szlosek '12 Avatar
    Carissa Szlosek ’12

    Zoe,

    You say there are nine African American students out of one hundred and six students in your grade. Surely these kids do not sit separately and seclude themselves from the other members of your grade. What is the likelihood that all of these kids even have lunch at the same period? They must eat lunch with the white students.

    Why must we analyze everything as black and white? I know that I sit with the people I want to sit with at lunch based on what tables have open seats. Thoughts of race, gender, or religion never contribute to my decision as to where I want to sit. It is my belief that this goes for most other students at NA as well.

    However, if this is a severe issue that I am just blind to, as a global academy, why haven’t we implemented assigned seating during lunch so that we can assure that a racial divide isn’t present?

    -Carissa Szlosek ’12

    1. Mr. Bitler Avatar
      Mr. Bitler

      I agree with Carissa. I fully believe in Reverend Martin Luther King’s ideal that what matters is the content of one’s character, not the color of one’s skin. In other words, I believe in a truly colorblind society. As we (my wife and I) raised our children, we simply taught them that different people have different skin colors – and our kids never thought twice about it (and they are mixed race themselves). Unfortunately, they are constantly bombarded in life by people who seek to make race an issue in places where it simply is not – and do not seem to like to believe that they (our children) actually don’t even think about it. In college, our kids have been frequently approached (and a couple of times accosted) by people who want them to join clubs based on their (mixed) race, etc. But for them – it’s not an issue which defines who they are. They have affinities for the cultures they’ve grown up in – but do not, in their minds, link such to race or color. As their dad, I’m glad.

      -Mr. Bitler

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