I was in fourth grade. I sat down on the
step of the door leading into the school from the
playground. I was tired, and decided to spend a few minutes
of recess alone.
“Look at that,” said one of the teachers.
“I know,” the other teacher nodded. This was
my teacher. She added, “There used to be only a few of them
like that. Now MOST of them are like that.”
The two women stared at the filthy child who
sat on the ground a few feet ahead of them pouring sandy
dirt onto her legs.
“How many do you have from the ghetto this
year?”
“Fifteen! More than half the class! How
about you?”
The child squinted back at them in the
afternoon sun.
“Twelve.”
I wondered what the little girl thought of
their words. She looked about six or so. I wondered why the
teachers continued to stare at her without telling her that
she was spoiling her outfit, and the other children might
make fun of her. I wondered why neither of them took her to
clean up in the bathroom.
Although I was also from the ghetto, I did
not play in dirt. But I was older.
Years later I went to college and took
courses in social sciences. In Sociology 101 I learned that
most people who are born in the ghetto never leave. I also
learned that children of low socio-economic families have
low self-esteem and have trouble achieving. At this, I
raised my hand. “Is this information based on inference or
statistics?”
“Statistics,” said the instructor. “The
numbers come from studies conducted by people who have gone
into low SES homes and found an absence of books. Sometimes
there is also a language barrier.”
“I just wondered because I grew up low SES,
and I never felt limited in terms of what I could do.”
“Did you have a father in the home?”
“My parents were divorced.”
“Consider yourself lucky. Most people who
have backgrounds like that don’t make it this far. Your
mother did a good job raising you.”
It had never occurred to me to measure my
life by these statistical verdicts.
A few years later, I moved back to my home
town. When my son started attending the school where I had
gone as a child, I began running into my childhood
playmates. Many of the people I remembered from the ghetto
had become adults with their own apartments in the tenement
building where we grew up, raising a new generation there.
I recognized one of them in the schoolyard
after the bell rang. She said, “You look really different.”
Looking into her eyes was like looking into a vacuum. She
walked away with her son, and I remembered one night that
she and I had run around all over the ghetto looking for her
parents. Finally, one of them must have arrived home because
I remember her going into the dark, empty apartment. Later
that night I asked my mother why Tanya’s parents didn’t have
furniture.
The night before Hurricane Katrina struck, I
watched the cars moving at about five miles per hour, bumper
to bumper, out of New Orleans. I pictured myself in a car on
the highway with my son at age two, shrieking for freedom
from the car seat, as the car crept along in the darkness.
Then I tried to picture doing this with five kids…and then…
“Who’s NOT there,” I pondered, looking at the headlights.
What if you have no car? What if you’re sick? What if you’re
old? What if you’re broke?” Perhaps it is because the ghetto
still haunts my dreams, and the faces of my childhood haunt
my life as an adult, that I cannot forget what it means to
live on the outside of mainstream society.
The next day, there they were on the news-
the answers to my questions- the faces of the individuals
comprising a fringe population that rarely are the focus of
the public eye. Many of them spoke about their living
nightmares. Quickly, power-suited men and women speculated
about this group of people and their problems. It is as
though the hurricane blew down the walls of America’s dark
closet to reveal a seemingly forgotten people. Is it a
racial issue? Yes, if being a minority makes it harder to
get the kind of job that takes you into the mainstream and
out of the periphery. With or without racial factors,
poverty is a legacy.
Hurricane Katrina has us thinking about
deprived American citizens, wondering why and how this
happened in the land of the free. We are donating, making
plans, making promises. We see the faces of children, and we
feel an outpouring of compassion.
I cannot help but wonder why this compassion
was absent from the inner city school that I attended as a
child. In my school, advantaged children ridiculed and
isolated the kids from the ghetto. The teachers did not
prevent this, but participated. Today, the school is no
different. The teachers still make public remarks about how
many students in the class are from the ghetto.
A few years ago, I heard one of my son’s
friends talking about a classmate. “Oh, that kid? He lives
in the ghetto. I’m not allowed to play with him.” Now, at
the age of eleven, the boy from the ghetto has ceased
playing with my son, and will only associate with “gangstas.”
Where do poor adults come from? Are they
unintelligent or unmotivated? Perhaps it is easier to think
so than to consider the possibility that they were
segregated as children from their comparatively privileged
peers. Would America really do this to children? Would it
blame them for their parents’ problems?
We are living in a society where parents
live in fear that a teacher or doctor will think the wrong
thing about a bruise or a scratch. But ask an adult who grew
up in the system how she was treated… ask if abuse never
happened in the school, or in the institution…
It is time that America got in touch with
its own hypocrisy. We’ve all heard jokes about trailer parks
and ghettos. Do we justify laughing in the righteous thought
of having paid our tax bills? Do we believe, deep down, that
beggars can’t be choosers, therefore we do not owe respect
to this part of the American caste system? Is it possible
that our own ability to thrive could be wounded if we were
treated this way?
No amount of money or programs can replace
the personal empowerment that comes with being treated as a
valuable individual with unique gifts, unlimited
opportunities and important contributions to make socially.
Children learn at a very young age where their parents stand
in the pecking order. They feel resentment toward adults who
look down on their parents, and they often admire their
parents enough to follow in their footsteps.
Perhaps while we discuss the wrongness of
the holocaust with our children, we should address the
subject as it pertains to persistent problems in our own
back yard. We say we promote tolerance and diversity, but
these need to go beyond skin deep.
I remember one enraged young woman in New
Orleans screaming behind the reporter, “It’s not about lower
class people or higher class people! It’s about PEOPLE!” A
few days later, a different reporter was unable to persuade
any evacuees to speak into the microphone. The reporter
said, “They are embarrassed, oddly enough.”