Sep 3, 2017
Amid the cries of alarm in the wake of the tragic violence in Charlottesville, one unanswered question stands out: After all these years – all this bitterness and anguish and even bloodshed – what, if anything, can be done to end racism in the United States once and for all?
Court decisions, laws, programs, institutions and processes of many kinds already have been put in place targeting racial bigotry. Perhaps, though, we need even more of them. If so, let's have them.
But there's one solution that gets to the heart of the problem yet is often overlooked. It can't be legislated or imposed by court order, but it's essential just the same. It's friendship.
I grew up in a segregated city – Washington, D.C. – at a time when racial separation was largely taken for granted. I still recall an incident from that time that suggests how racial matters stood. It happened in my fourth-year classroom in my all-white Jesuit high school. (In case you wonder, that school has long had a racially mixed student body – I'm talking about something that happened a long time ago.)