In 1959 writer John Howard Griffin darkened his face, not to perform in a minstrel show or to imitate the dance moves of Michael Jackson, but to "cross the line into a country of hate, fear, and hopelessness" and gain some insight into the world of African Americans in the South.

Mar 4, 2019 · 3:46 PM UTC

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The result was the journey recorded in "Black Like Me." The biggest revelation was to view white people from the outside and to experience the hateful gaze that confronted him when he changed nothing but the color of his skin. And to realize what racism did to the soul of America
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"Future historians will be mystified that generations of us could stand in the midst of this sickness and never see it, never really feel how our System distorted and dwarfed human lives because they happened to inhabit bodies encased in a darker skin."
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Replying to @RobertEllsberg
Griffin was a decorated veteran, a friend of Thomas Merton, and worked on Merton's biography until his health prevented its completion. James Whitmore portrayed Griffin in the 1964 dramatization of his book Black Like Me.
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Replying to @RobertEllsberg
I remember reading this book when it was published. Very moving story.
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