Playing Through the Pain

Posted on 12/21/07   Page 2 of 5
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The Wilbon situation reminded me of what a friend from Dallas said before I moved here a few years ago. He’s a fairly big sports personality down in Texas. He also happens to be black, and he told me to watch myself in Boston, warning that anyone with “brown skin” isn’t welcome.

More than anything, we have busing to thank for that reputation. There’s no getting around it. Instead of inspiring racial harmony, the experiment failed miserably as white parents threw stones at busloads of frightened black children without compunction. Boston has been known ever since as the racist city of segregated enclaves like Southie and Charlestown.

Of course, other cities have been plagued by race problems, too. L.A. suffered the Watts riots in 1965, and those that followed the Rodney King verdict in 1992. Just last May, cops there violently broke up a peaceful immigration rally by using what the police chief later termed “inappropriate” force. In New York City, officers pumped 41 shots into unarmed immigrant Amadou Diallo in 1999.

More recently, the NYPD killed an 18-year-old mentally ill black man when officers mistook his hairbrush for a gun. And yet the issue of racism plagues Boston more than most. Somehow, it has become a part of the city’s identity.

As is so often the case in Boston, the incidents most passionately recalled are tied to sports. There’s the one about the Sox giving Jackie Robinson a tryout, then running him out of town, supposedly at the request of owner Tom Yawkey. The Red Sox were, infamously, the last team in the majors to integrate when they finally signed Pumpsie Green—12 long years after Robinson became a Dodger and, more important, a powerful symbol of change. Bud Collins, the legendary sportswriter who started out at the Herald in the 1950s, was once scolded for even suggesting that someone at the paper write about the Sox and racism. In his brilliant, brutally honest book Shut Out: A Story of Race and Baseball in Boston, ESPN’s Howard Bryant, who grew up here and worked as a sports columnist for the Herald, details the rebuke Collins received from his bosses: “‘They told me I had a lot to learn about their town,’ Collins remembered.”

The animus toward black athletes wasn’t exclusive to the Red Sox. Celtics Hall of Famer Bill Russell may have been named one of the NBA’s 50 greatest players, but that didn’t shield him from bigotry during his playing days. Russell, who once called Boston a “flea market of racism,” even had vandals break into his home just to defecate in his bed. His teammates also felt the hatred. “We were living in Framingham when I was a player,” recalls Celtics Hall of Famer K. C. Jones. “I went to buy a house about five blocks away.... The neighbors said they didn’t want any blacks to move into the house.” Another time, Jones applied for membership at a country club, only to be told they weren’t fond of “entertainers.” Still, Jones is quick to point out that he enjoyed his time in Boston, and that things have changed. He even calls me back to make sure I note that he harbors no ill will. He stresses this. But he also knows that the city’s racism didn’t end with him or Russell.

Red Sox outfielder Tommy Harper had an experience similar to Jones’s. In 1973, during spring training in Winter Haven, Florida, he and other black players were not invited to dinners his white teammates attended at a segregated local club. Twelve years later, while working as a member of the Sox coaching staff, he described the incident to the Globe. Within a year he was fired. He eventually brought a discrimination lawsuit against the club that resulted in a settlement. Not long afterward, Jim Rice—for years the lone black Sox player—supposedly told a young Ellis Burks to leave the city as fast as he could.

“Having gone to school up there for three years, it was always an issue, and there were places where you were told, ‘Don’t go,’” says NBA Hall of Famer Julius “Dr. J” Erving, who starred at UMass before becoming a Celtics antagonist with the New York Nets and Philadelphia 76ers. “Jim Rice and I were friendly, and we had racial discussions. It was this undertone more than anything blatant. It was rough up there for athletes.”

Even as late as the 1980s, the symbol for sports in Boston—and, really, the city as a whole—was Larry Bird’s Celtics. A team of predominately white superstars, the Celtics were seen as a counterbalance to Magic Johnson’s “Showtime” Lakers. That white fans in Boston and across the country rallied so passionately behind those Celtics, that they privately loved seeing a white team excel in a league consisting mostly of black players, rankled many African Americans. Former Detroit Pistons star Isiah Thomas drew the ire of many in Boston when he said that had Bird been black, he would have been just another good player.

Then there is former Celtic Dee Brown, who, after being drafted in 1990, was driving through Wellesley when he was pulled from his car by the police and held face-down on the pavement at gunpoint. The cops were looking for a bank robber. A black man.

And yet, like K. C. Jones, Brown doesn’t want anyone to get the wrong idea: He loves Boston. “One incident happens and people dwell on it. It happens in every city, but Boston is stigmatized by it,” Brown says. He repeatedly tells me that he has nothing but fond memories of playing here, that he wishes people would know the whole story before so quickly judging the city. “If you go back in history, especially with the Celtics, they had the first black player. The first black coach. There are a lot of things people forget to put in there. There are racial problems in every city. You go to the wrong neighborhood in any city and you’re black or you’re white or Hispanic or Italian or Irish, you might be in the wrong place.”

Despite defending Boston to anyone who will listen, and especially to me, Brown acknowledges that altering the perception of the city is a difficult task. He knows because he’s tried, making his case to players and journalists alike. He hasn’t gotten very far. Most of the bitterness toward Boston is so deeply rooted now that it feels almost impossible to change anyone’s mind. A lot of it goes back decades, festering for as long as some people have been alive. “People think the core of Boston is Italian and Irish,” Brown says. “The Celtic. The Patriot. The Tea Party. Paul Revere. It’s that history.... Being from Florida or the South, people would say to me, ‘Boston’s just like Up South.’ That’s what they called it: Up South.”

 

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User Comments:

My Boston Experience
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 26, 2007 at 10:51 AM
COMMENT:
I am an African American executive - a Partner in one of the largest consulting firms in the world. I travel throughout the country and have spent time in just about every large American city - including Boston. I have never felt particularly comfortable or welcome in Boston I have struggled with the notion that Boston's reputation has somehow put me on the defensive so that I am ultra-sensitive and looking for something to be amiss. I do know one thing to be fact... In my adulthood I have been called the "N" word on the street - for no absolute reason - twice. Once was in Tampa (Florida) and the other was in Boston.
A Paradox
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 26, 2007 at 11:28 AM
COMMENT:
Let me get this straight. You say if anyone in Boston denies that they are racist, it's a losing battle and they come across as protesting too much, yet you deride the major sports teams for not wanting to talk about racism? Why should they? If they told you they didn't see or experience it to the extent that has been reported (because, whether anyone wants to admit this or not, racism is EVERYWHERE!), you and, apparently, your readers wouldn't believe them anyway. So what's the point?
It has nothing to do with color anymore.
Posted by Betty | Dec. 26, 2007 at 11:50 AM
COMMENT:
As Bostonians, we are cold, distrusting, and often outright rude to outsiders. We don't care if they are white, black, or a Yankee fan, we are just not an openly friendly place. Get to know us, though, and we'll accept you fairly quickly, so you too can be rude to everyone else.
Its the Truth
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 26, 2007 at 11:56 AM
COMMENT:
I once visited my friend at Harvard. We went out to bars in Boston and I experienced one of the worst nights of my life. I was called "colored", "nigger", "darkie", "black chappie", "cotton-head", It was almost like I couldn't take ten steps without getting into it with some bigot.
City of Champions?
Posted by Steven | Dec. 26, 2007 at 1:03 PM
COMMENT:
I've lived in many parts of the United States, and I have NEVER, even once, heard anyone call Boston the "City of Champions."
maybe, maybe not...
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 3, 2008 at 12:48 PM
COMMENT:
I suppose it's a question of immoral vs amoral, and thus not really a hair worth splitting, but I don't necessarily see racism in the use of 'the n-word' and other such slurs. It's often just a case of the easiest and handiest thing to upset and unsettle people, especially in the arena of sports. That's not any better than racism, I'll grant, but let us struggle with the thing as it is...
you can't experience racism like you can in Boston...
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 3, 2008 at 12:59 PM
COMMENT:
You are right in your conclusion that people who gloss it over and say Boston has changed are people who have something to lose (monetary, social). Visiting from a metropolitan city, I never really new what pervasive racism was until I visited Boston. It isn't isolated cases of someone using the n-word--from the glares at me or my friends, to the subtle and not so subtle ways they want you to get the hell out-- this city is a perfect example of how being educated is not necessarily a cure for ignorance!
you haven't experienced pervasive racism until you've been to Boston...
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 3, 2008 at 1:13 PM
COMMENT:
Like you said in your conclusion-- the guys now glossing it over have something to lose. This isn't random cases of Bostonian's using the N-word. It's in glares and subtle to not-so-subtle ways of them wishing you get the hell. This quaint little town proves being educated isn't necessarily a cure for ignorance!
Why short change your argument
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 3, 2008 at 1:21 PM
COMMENT:
First of all, it is a shame that you've limited yourself to the arena of sports, because you have trivialized a very serious discussion. Is there racism in Boston? Of course there is. When you paint a bus silver and call it a train, that's racist. When the white mayor basically leaves a neighborhood to fester in violence for years with inaction, that's racist. When the only people who are murdered in this town are young black kids in the same one square mile, that's racist. However, could you say the same things about every major city on the eastern seaboard? Yes. Who cares about sports. Talk about the real sickness of race and poverty and what hell it creates for major urban centers.
Pure Idiocy
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 5, 2008 at 11:18 AM
COMMENT:
The author of this article is a joke himself. Waahhhh, the people of Boston are evil white devil racists! Give me a break you idiot! Report the sports like you are supposed to and leave your liberal socialist, communist agenda aside. People like you make me sick!
CRY ME A RIVER
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 5, 2008 at 2:03 PM
COMMENT:
Wahh! Wahh! Wahh! Whites are evil! Whites are racists! Baloney. Blacks and Mexicans (apparently including Mr. Gonzalez) are the biggest, most hateful racists around. Everything they say and do is based on their race. The vast majority of racial hate crimes are done by non-Whites against White victims. Whites have bent over backwards to share the bounty of this great nation that Whites founded and built. You can bet that Blacks and Mexicans would never do the same for Whites if the tables were turned. Why don't you ungrateful crybabies shut the **** up already? We're sick and tired of being blamed for your failures, and we're not going to take it any more. Welcome to the 21st century. The days of your Marxist race card scam are over!
the truth.
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 5, 2008 at 8:38 PM
COMMENT:
I went to graduate school in Boston and I have never encountered the kind of pervasive, averse racism anywhere else in the US-- even the deep south-- that I did there.
We cry for huamnity
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 6, 2008 at 12:21 PM
COMMENT:
I have been to Boston many times. During those visits I have seen the good,bad and ugly facades of the city. Much can be said of the bad and the ugly, but it is remarkable the with so many institutions of higher learner in the area so many wear blinders. There are many reasons certain people want to believe themselves to be superior to others by keeping their feet on others throats. To be educated and remain ignorant is an oxymoron. There are some who try to feel superior, even though financially they are inferior. America needs to at some point have serious dialog on racism. History has shown all great civilizations have fallen from within. To those Bostonians that have admitted racism is prevalent there I commend you. To those who feel as a few posted above, remember that all humanity originated in Africa. So why not help to salvage the planet, rather than to destroy it.
A Reply To "Anonymous"
Posted by Diversity | Jan. 6, 2008 at 5:56 PM
COMMENT:
>"America needs to at some point have serious dialog on racism." Agreed. America is permeated with vile hatred and racism that Blacks and Mexicans exhibit towards Whites. Blacks and Mexicans purposely seek out and target Whites for assault, robbery, rape, and even murder, hundreds if not thousands of times every day. They do this on purpose; their goal is to "get Whitey". Usually they utter racial slurs against the White victims. La Raza and Aztlan are clearly based on Mexican racism. Their stated goal is to remove all Blacks and Whites from the Southwest. These are clearly racial hate crimes, yet are rarely reported or prosecuted as such. Whites founded and built the USA, have bent over backwards to atone for slavery and share this nation with non-Whites, yet all they get for their kindness is hatred from ungrateful non-Whites. Whites are always portrayed as evil racists, yet the irrefutable evidence shows that nowadays Whites are the main VICTIMS of racism. Yes, America defin
racism
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 7, 2008 at 1:26 PM
COMMENT:
Everybody says there is this RACE problem. Everybody says this RACE problem will be solved when the third world pours into EVERY white country and ONLY into white countries. The Netherlands and Belgium are more crowded than Japan or Taiwan, but nobody says Japan or Taiwan will solve this RACE problem by bringing in millions of third worlders and quote assimilating unquote with them. Everybody says the final solution to this RACE problem is for EVERY white country and ONLY white countries to "assimilate," i.e., intermarry, with all those non-whites. What if I said there was this RACE problem and this RACE problem would be solved only if hundreds of millions of non-blacks were brought into EVERY black country and ONLY into black countries? How long would it take anyone to realize I'm not talking about a RACE problem. I am talking about the final solution to the BLACK problem? "And how long would it take any sane black man to notice this and what kind of psycho bl
racism continued
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 7, 2008 at 1:34 PM
COMMENT:
What if I said there was this RACE problem and this RACE problem would be solved only if hundreds of millions of non-blacks were brought into EVERY black country and ONLY into black countries? How long would it take anyone to realize I'm not talking about a RACE problem. I am talking about the final solution to the BLACK problem? And how long would it take any sane black man to notice this and what kind of psycho black man wouldn't object to this? But if I tell that obvious truth about the ongoing program of genocide against my race, the white race, Liberals and respectable conservatives agree that I am a naziwhowantstokillsixmillionjews. They say they are anti-racist. What they are is anti-white. Anti-racist is a code word for anti-white.
Boston
Posted by juan | Jan. 8, 2008 at 7:31 AM
COMMENT:
Boston is a very unique place. They have a underated campus at Boston College. These guys are good at sports. They have good people and good dining. The old Filene's,and other stores. Not many places in the world have the characterisics to match it.One hell of a good town!
boston
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 8, 2008 at 8:17 AM
COMMENT:
Coming from Boston I don't understand what people are talking about. They say there's this pervasive stench of racism permeating the city, and while yes, there's racism, I don't think it's any more than other cities. Definitely less than I've seen in LA, less than in Miami. Those that say there isn't any in Boston are fooling themselves but I've gotten more racist comments directed at me in the few times I've been in NYC than in the city of Boston.
remember busing??
Posted by arthur | Jan. 8, 2008 at 9:49 AM
COMMENT:
I grew up in boston during the 60s and 70s- none of the coments ive read have mentioned the southie school busing issue- this is where racism first reared its ugly face for the nation to see and gave boston its racist image it still has yet to shake . yeah tom yawkey was a cracker, but red auerbach more then made up for it. Red, a jew, gave more black players chances to further there careers as coaches than any other man in sports ever. he didnt see black or white, he saw green, celtics green. either you were green or you werent. white and black didnt come into the picture. We celtics fans loved russell as much as hevlicek or bird, he just didnt happen to like to sign autographs- who cares. Bird played ball as good as anyone of his era, but if you rooted for him and the celtics you were dissed as a racist. Of course there was racism in boston, as in many other cities across america, but weve had a bad rap going back to the insanity in south boston. as a bostonrecord producer who wor
... wow
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 8, 2008 at 12:38 PM
COMMENT:
... I gotta say... all you white people(white myself) talking about how racism effects you most shut the hell up please. Racism perpetrated against blacks mexicans asians etc has created an uneven playing field between the races. If you didnt hav a job i bet you'd be just as criminal as any black or mexican in the ghetto. All men were created equal and they are still equal. If you were born into a middle or upper class family(mainly whites) you're bound to have a better shot in life. So stop feeling sorry for yourselves and bitching about how evil black people are and confront the problem at hand. Racism can't be stopped but at least try to be aware of what it really does to people. god damn
pathetic
Posted by Anonymous | Jan. 11, 2008 at 12:37 PM
COMMENT:
All you losers who are blaming minorites for your failures in life are giving your future generations as much of a chance to succeed and be real with the world today as yourselves. Did white people start America? Yes. but how and why? How: by killing the current people (native americans) and persecuting Why: for Religious freedom and equality-did you guys forget that? let me ask you: What has your life accomplished blaming other people for your insecurities and miserable lives? NOTHING. Keep on blaming minorities for everything, your only hurting yourselves and your families. Reality is we minorities are here to stay-like it or not. We love this country and Boston so live with it. Stop blaming others for your failures you losers! Forget the fact that our governor is black? That should show the world that once the racist generation of the Boston 70's dies from old age, things will be a lot better and already is. Racism is a world wide problem but what has it brought the human race? nev
Ivy League educated black female in Boston..I want out now.
Posted by N/A | Jan. 15, 2008 at 6:03 PM
COMMENT:
There are about 5 comments on this board that perfectly encapsulate all that is wrong with this backwards city. My favorite quote, thanks "Cry me a river" being: "Whites have bent over backwards to share the bounty of this great nation that Whites founded and built. You can bet that Blacks and Mexicans would never do the same for Whites if the tables were turned. Why don't you ungrateful crybabies shut the **** up already? " Honestly you dumbfuck. I guess those blacks just weren't working hard enough on the plantation for you were they? Race is a social construct that racists use to coward behind alongside their fear and bigotry. Stay in South Boston and at your Bruins games and dont emerge. Ever.
BS
Posted by Anonymous | Jun. 19, 2008 at 8:30 AM
COMMENT:
Are there racists in Boston? Yes. Are there more racists in Boston than other cities? Hell no. There's a reason we have a black Governor. We're one of the most liberal cities in the US. Race plays no part in Boston sports. Yeah there were "riots" that left no one dead in the 1970s. Some idiot Irish didn't want us going to school with their kids. In Detroit, the army shot us down. In LA, there's a race riot every 10 years. In the South, they're selling shirts with Obama as Curious George. Yeah, compared to when I lived in Atlanta or the South Side there aren't a lot of fellow AA around. So what? It was weird at first, but the idea that a city is inherently more racist than another city because there aren't a whole lot of blacks in town is foolish. But if people want to assume that Boston is racist, that's their problem. The comments above probably come from all those neighborhoods they know they aren't allowed to drive through.
Theo Epstein Defines Boston Racism
Posted by Onin | Aug. 5, 2008 at 11:47 AM
COMMENT:
Just look at Theo Epstein's management of the Boston Red Sox. Theo is the biggest racist of them all.
Boston
Posted by Paul | Aug. 15, 2008 at 1:30 PM
COMMENT:
I've been to many major cities in this great country and I just have to say that the only time I have ever been called a nigger was in Bigoted Boston

Posted by Anonymous | Mar. 1, 2009 at 9:18 PM
COMMENT:
Its funny that some white people can be real ignorant. They claim that America was founded and built by whites..yes..thanks to the african slaves they used for buidling america...thanks to the mexicans and african americans who have made this a great nation and the whites have allowed that only through the struggles african americans have gone through to make this nation great and they deserve full credit let god be the witness...the whites don't even recognise that and rant about how they build this country and talk shit like go back to africa..some cant even spell that right..boloney!!!.
Boston Is Dealt The Bad Hand
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 21, 2009 at 4:49 PM
COMMENT:
People of modern day Boston are misunderstood and unfairly criticized for the sole reason of our ancestors. A couple bad events happened in the past and we have to pay the cost. Boston does have racism but I believe other cities are just as bad if not worse. If we want to critique a city though on it's past then cities such as Atlanta, Birmingham, New Orleans and so are should be considered the most racist cities on earth. But you are never gonna get no where with pointing fingers. Before census Boston has more minorities than white people themselves. Neighborhoods such as Dorchester, Mattapan, Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, Somerville, and Cambridge to name a few are some of the most diverse cities in the US. I am a white male and I can honestly say most of my friends are African American, Hispanic and or Asian. We don't see color, we see personality. Most athletes though, lets face it, are colored people that dont understand our city. They come here not realizing that sports is a religion a
Boston Dealt Bad Hand cont.......
Posted by Patrick | Jul. 21, 2009 at 4:51 PM
COMMENT:
and we hate all our rivals and take it more seriously than other cities. There could be racist remarks shouted out, I cant deny that but its more on the basis today as if you are on the opposing team, your an enemy and are going to get sweared at, yelled at, beer thrown at, bot cause your black, but because your a yankee. If a team had all players that were white and went to a all Black city to play basketball they would experience race as well. If I were to walk in a Black neighborhood in the south I would get beat up probably and called a Honkey and so on. I would probably bet money that if I (A white man) were to walk in a black nighborhood lets say in Atlanta at night my chances of getting robbed we be higher than a black man getting robbed in a white neighborhood in Boston, Am I Right? Take the chance to see the Boston that is not seen in the movies. Walk the neighborhoods were Malcolm X grew up, Martin Luther King preached such as Dorchester, Mission Hill and Roxbury, instead
Boston Dealt Bad Hand cont.......
Posted by Patrick | Jul. 21, 2009 at 4:52 PM
COMMENT:
....of judging the city from your high rise hotel room in the Back Bay, and you would see the diversity; people from all backgrounds working as one to make their community better. Unfair claims just leads to more hatred so maybe next time you judge a book by its cover make sure to at least be willing to read some of the paragraphs.
Boston is No Different From.....
Posted by eddie | Jul. 22, 2009 at 9:58 PM
COMMENT:
Boston is no different from any other city regarding racism, born and raised in New York City, I always been a Celtics fan, after moving to Boston in the late 80's first thing I noticed was diversity, Is there racism is Boston? Perhaps, Are Irish folks racist? perhaps, but what the city didn't understand that they ran into a Dominican version of Archie Bunker, we New Yorkers can be very rude as well, I felt right in, Despite that, Boston is a very unique place, racism is all over America, it's worst in the South if you ask me. These idiots Posting anonymous comments, face the music pussy (Black, white Latino, etc)
Boston is No Different From.....
Posted by eddie | Jul. 22, 2009 at 10:18 PM
COMMENT:
Now that I got my 2 cents of bigotry out of the way, lets talk history, yes Boston has had a few minor racial incidents in the past, like the South Boston riots, which was no different than an after school fight, but lets also focus on how Boston help slaves escape their masters from the south by hiding them and feeding them as well all over New England, how in modern times we have a black governor, how the Redsoxs recruited the best Dominican ball players, not to mention how the Celtics squad are almost all black star players, how Menino allowed the Muslims to built a 25 Million dollar house of worship in the middle of Roxbury, Boston as a city and its citizens have redeem themselves by doing the right thing, No other city is a diverse a Boston, I love it here.
No Place Like Boston
Posted by eddie | Jul. 22, 2009 at 10:22 PM
COMMENT:
No Other City is as Diverse like Boston, I Love it Here Dude.
Who Are We Kidding.....
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 23, 2009 at 7:08 PM
COMMENT:
Who are we kidding folks? Boston is the mecca modern day bigotry state, specially in sports and sport journalism, an example of this is overrated sports commentator Bob Ryan is a great example of this, when he said "Brown People Are all Cheaters" and goes on saying in the same sentence "All Dominican sluggers should be booked and read their Miranda rights", leaving out all other whites involved with steroids like (white alter boys) Lenny Dykstra, Mark McGwire, Barry Bonds, Paul LoDuca, Roger Clemens, Rick Ankiel, and Éric Serge Gagné just to name a few. If this is not bigotry at its very finest, then what the fuck is it? I'm a white Boston resident all my life trying to shed this absurd reputation we have and bigots like Bob doesn't make it any better. conclusion: 1- All journalists are probably drunk bigots. 2- All Boston sports journalists are doubly suspect. 3- All Boston sports journalists with Irish ancestry should have breathalyzers installed on their computers. Make that
Boston Poster Boy of Racism
Posted by Anonymous | Jul. 23, 2009 at 7:29 PM
COMMENT:
The biggest official bigots in Boston are the Irish population sadly to say, they stand out the most, for instance, City councilor Jimmy Kelly refuses to support blacks who were discriminated against at their housing complex and fights for the whites of Southie who he insists are still owed something from the busing era and he keeps getting reelected. A South Boston pub hangs stuffed monkeys on its walls during Black History Month, but the taps keep flowing. Former city councilor Albert "Dapper" O'Neil says a Vietnamese neighborhood in Fields Corner reminds him of "Saigon, for Chrissakes. Makes you sick." He's reelected. I can literally smell the ethanol coming out of their speeches. We have a very long way to go as a City.
Massachusetts Raised!!!
Posted by Willie | Aug. 30, 2009 at 9:43 PM
COMMENT:
Listen,as a person who grew up in MA,and has been to the city of Boston a countless number of times, (because of certain reason's,mainly baseball).I know first hand how racist the city of Boston is, and NO!!! I'm not black,but,I'am a person of color my father is (how funny this is!!)Irish,my mother is Dominican and even though the obvious mixture in my features is evident,I have experience the very prejudice in Boston.I've also met good people from Boston as well.My last name is McCleary.I'am a long time Red Sox fan,from youth.However,Boston prejudice is infinite!!!.NUF SAID!!!.
mix it up dumb dumbs
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 8, 2009 at 7:31 PM
COMMENT:
Just intergrate and procreate, come on its good for evolution, lets move forward - Lenny Kraviz, Alicia Keyes,Mirah Carey,Phoebe Snow,Tiger Woods,Halle Berry,President Obama, see proof- all sucessful,all powerful and Beautiful and TALENTED Mix itup and the list goes on..Peace and Rock N' Roll!
Boston
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 11, 2009 at 11:28 PM
COMMENT:
The Celtics were the first NBA franchise to draft an African-American player -- Chuck Cooper in 1950. They became the first NBA team to send an all-black starting lineup onto the floor in 64. The man responsible was the same guy who put together the "mainly white" Celtics teams of the 1980s. I've lived in Boston and have heard some racist words/remarks but not any more than I've heard in other major cities. There are obv race issues in America, but that doesnt make every issue racist. If I as a black man punch a white man in the face its assault, but if he hits me first its all of a sudden a hate crime. We need to stop obsessing over race, its no longer an excuse for ignorance, for not being motivated, and not being educated. I do not have a college degree, when I dont get a job its not because I'm black..Its because I'm not qualified...when a sports team has a large white percent but keeps winning championships, they aren't racist...they just selected the best men for the job
Difficult question
Posted by Jay | Jan. 19, 2010 at 7:29 AM
COMMENT:
I graduated from a private school in West Roxbury in 2002. Thinking through my 10 best friends, 4 were white, 3 were black, 1 was hispanic, 1 was vietnamese, and 1 was indian (I'm white). I spent significant time in virtually every neighborhood of the city, and I felt in the presence of less racism, both overt and covert, in high school in boston than I have at any point in my life since (I have lived in 4 different cities but have not moved back to Boston). Still, I can't dismiss all the comments from black people saying "boston is the most racist place i've ever been." I don't doubt that it's there, it just doesn't jibe at all with my experience. I think it comes down to the fact that racism exists everywhere, and if people are expecting it more in Boston, they're likely to see it more. Who knows.
Bostonia
Posted by Anonymous | Mar. 16, 2010 at 10:11 AM
COMMENT:
I'm from Boston. It is the minority of white people in Boston that take part it overtly racist comments and acts. However, a major part of the problem is that the people of Boston are very proud, and are big on hiding any flaws of the city or the people of the city. It is that sweeping things under the rug belief system that perpetuates, not only racism, but hate and distrust in Boston. If the white majority, whom which do not take part in these acts, more often, called out the wrong-doers for committing these hateful acts and admitted that it is an issue, the problem would not be as socially acceptable. I've witnessed it, people on this site have exemplified it, it is an issue. I have a black wife from New York, 2 bi-racial kids, I hope it gets better.
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