Going to School in Black and White

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by Cindy Waszak Geary




  Title Page

  Durham, NC

  Copyright

  Copyright © 2017

  Cindy Waszak Geary and LaHoma Smith Romocki

  Going to School in Black and White: A Dual Memoir of Desegregation

  Cindy Waszak Geary and LaHoma Smith Romocki

  lightmessages.com/geary-romocki

  [email protected]

  [email protected]

  First Edition

  Published 2017 by Torchflame Books

  lightmessages.com

  Durham, NC 27713 USA

  SAN: 920-9298

  Paperback ISBN: 978-1-61153-252-4

  E-book ISBN: 978-1-61153-251-7

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2017949598

  Cover image of Hillside High School (circa 1970)

  from The Herald Sun

  Author photograph by Dannie Daniel

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise, except as permitted under Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 International Copyright Act, without the prior written permission except in brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  Some names and identifying details have been changed to protect the privacy of individuals.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Contents

  Quotations

  Dedications

  Foreword

  Prologue— Why We Wrote This Book

  1—Setting the Stage

  2— In the Beginning Was “The Letter”

  3—Growing Up Black in Durham Before Desegregation

  4— My White World Before Hillside

  5— Going to Whitted With the White Kids

  6— Being White at Hillside High: A Different World

  7— Finally at Hillside: It’s All About the Band

  8— The Junior Miss Pageants

  9— From Black and White to White and Black

  10— Discovering I Was Black

  11— Taking It With Us

  12— Sending Our Kids to School

  Epilogue—What now

  Notes

  Acknowledgments

  The Authors

  If you liked Going to School in Black and White

  Quotations

  “The events described are always less significant than the impressions they leave on the mind and heart.”

  —bell hooks

  “Many things are true at once.”

  —Elizabeth Alexander

  “Hearts must change.”

  —President Barack Obama

  Dedications

  For my parents, Norma and Rudy Stock,

  who taught me that we are all in this together

  —Cindy

  For Mom and Dad and my entire village, for making sure that I always had everything I needed and surrounding me with unconditional love

  —LaHoma

  Foreword

  Foreword

  Congratulations to Dr. Cynthia Waszak Geary and Dr. LaHoma Smith Romocki for their discourse on Going to School in Black and White: A Dual Memoir of Desegregation.

  The desegregation of Hillside High School was a tremendous challenge of human growth and intellectual awakening of mind, body, and spirit. Fortunately, the administration, board of education and the parent-teacher-student organization accepted the challenge of embracing the change of human culture and lifestyle. God’s wisdom gives us love, faith, hope, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, and self-control.

  The writers of this literary piece are honor graduates of Hillside High School, Durham, N.C., who continue noteworthy contributions to humankind.

  —Dr. John H. Lucas, Durham, N.C.

  June 29, 2017

  John H. Lucas Sr. was named the principal of Hillside High School in 1962 and was there during the events described in this book. He remained as principal until 1985. He went on to become president of Shaw University and was elected to the first school board of the newly merged Durham school systems, serving as its vice chairman. At age 97, he continues to be an active member of the White Rock Baptist Church where he is a Deacon Chair Emeritus and serves on multiple community, state, and national boards. He remains beloved by thousands of Hillside High alumni.

  Prologue— Why We Wrote This Book

  Dr. John H. Lucas, Sr.

  Prologue

  Why We Wrote This Book

  During the North Carolina summer of 1970, the Durham City Schools submitted “The Permanent Plan for Desegregation of City Schools,” approved two months later by the N.C. Court of Appeals. The “Plan” altered the school careers of two teenagers who lived across town from each other, 15-year-old Cindy Stock and 13-year-old LaHoma Smith. Both were assigned to schools they never anticipated attending, and eventually, both were brought together to attend the same high school. They became friends, but their friendship did not develop until many years later under very different circumstances.

  Cindy, a white student, had just completed her three years at the predominantly white Rogers-Herr Junior High School and, until that summer of 1970, expected to move up to the predominantly white Durham High. LaHoma, a black student, attended the newer of the two predominantly black junior high schools, Shepard Junior High School, as a seventh grader. The Permanent Plan for Desegregation sent them to different schools than they would have attended otherwise. Cindy was assigned to Hillside High, Durham’s historically black high school, and LaHoma was assigned to Whitted Junior High, the other, much older, black junior high school in a well-worn building across town, to be integrated with white students.

  Going to School in Black and White is the dual memoir of two students who eventually found themselves at Hillside High School from different sides of a court-ordered racial “balancing act.” We are Cindy and LaHoma, and our experiences were the literal embodiment of desegregation policies, situated in a particular time and place. As adults, we have reflected on how these experiences played out on our individual paths. We now share these intertwining personal stories that are part of a bigger story about America, education, and race—and about how the personal relates to the political.

  This story runs counter to the usual narrative in that it is a story (at least initially) of integration of white students into black schools. And it is unique because it brings together two perspectives. One perspective is that of a white student who found herself for the first time a part of a racial minority, and the other is that of a black student who had never attended integrated schools and could not understand why she had to leave a school she loved for one she felt was inferior. Going to School in Black and White focuses on our junior high and high school experiences but also moves beyond to college, where race and racial integration at our respective universities continued to shape our lives. Through the prism of our current friendship, each of us considers how our school experiences influenced life decisions and how these decisions brought us to similar places.

  Memory is subject to bias and distortion when examined through the lens of more recent knowledge. Care has been taken to verify whatever is verifiable through public documents, and some names have been changed to protect the privacy of people we included in our stories. Adolescence is a murky time at best as we sort ourselves out, trying to understand who we are and how we feel about what is going on in our lives. With this in mind, we have been as honest as we could in sharing our experiences and feelings from more than 40 years ago.

  1—Setting the Stage

  One

  Se
tting the Stage

  LaHoma

  I grew up during a time when the integration of the Durham public schools was thought to be the single most important factor in improving the lives of the city’s black residents. The idea was simple—if they went to schools with whites, black children would benefit by attending better-resourced schools, and that would lead to more academic opportunities and social mobility as a way to ensure social and economic success. This was the rationale for the struggle in which my parents and most of the adults I knew were engaged.

  I moved overseas after college in the late 1970s and lost touch with the day-to-day skirmishes on the front lines of school integration in my hometown. Judging from my experiences and evidence from the people with whom I kept in touch, the integration experiment had been mostly successful. All my friends had graduated from two- or four-year colleges, attended graduate schools, law schools, and medical schools, and had secured jobs or started their own businesses. I had long convinced myself that integration had benefited all of us, despite my youthful objections. The naysayers had been wrong. Those who dared to believe otherwise appeared to be a dwindling minority.

  As newlyweds, my husband and I moved back to the U.S. in 1989 and searched for a place to call home. We looked in the greater Durham area and eventually settled on a small, rural community about 12 miles north of Durham. The reason for not moving back to Durham was largely a financial one: We could afford to buy more house and property in the country. My Yankee-born husband, Tim, was a newcomer to North Carolina, and I thought that it would be fair if we lived in a relatively new community for both of us. Besides that, Tim loves the outdoors, and our new home suited both of us. He had a place to fish and garden, and I relished the large backyard for family cookouts. I reconnected with Durham friends from my youth. Many of them already had children in grade school, but none in high school, and although we talked about a lot of things, I never thought to ask about the school system. In hindsight, I realize we might even have discussed schools, but the subject didn’t register in my pre-kids brain. Our conversations were nostalgic reflections of Hillside “back in the day,” but they never led me to ask about the Hillside “of today.”

  So I was speechless when I read an op-ed piece in the News & Observer of Raleigh, the nearby state capital, about the state of public schools in Durham. I brought the article to share with Cindy and our former doctoral advisor, Jane, with whom we had formed a small writing group. I read aloud to them: “Durham schools’ student population is now 17 percent white, 25 percent Hispanic, and the rest mostly African American. Seventy-seven percent of the 33,900 students who attend Durham’s district schools qualify for a free or reduced price lunch. In some schools, the percentage is more than 80.”

  The 2015 op-ed described the dismal end-of-year letter grades awarded to the Durham school system. Out of 53 district schools graded, 29 received either a D or F. The article stated that as Durham’s district schools’ grades had begun a downward slide, “there has been a corresponding increase in the number of high poverty schools and more segregation by race and class.” The writer continued: “It’s frustrating that the schools are growing poorer even as the city enjoys a boom in restaurants, the arts and downtown real estate. In that paradox, the responsibility can’t be put on conservative lawmakers. It reflects the decision of middle­class (white) residents to send their children to charter or private schools….” (1)

  “What happened to the grand experiment?” I mumbled to myself and then turned to Jane and Cindy. Everything had worked out OK for me and my friends; had it not worked out well for everyone? What was wrong, and why were white parents moving their children out of the Durham public school system?

  I looked over at Cindy, who was shaking her head slowly as she considered my question. Several minutes later, we realized that we had been at the same school, at the same time—during the integration of the Durham public school system. As we peeled back layers of memories and feelings about this pivotal period in our lives, we realized that we were reliving events through different racial filters.

  Our reactions brought more questions to the fore as we considered this newly found connection from long ago. Was there something unique about our individual perspectives that was worth exploring? Would we gain greater insight through reliving a shared journey of our experiences? Had my assumptions about the merits of integration been so wrong? We also wanted to make sense of the troubling narrative unfolding about race, class and education in Durham, a narrative that seemed at odds with our own experiences.

  Over the past couple of years, Cindy and I have grown closer as we nurtured our budding book project. We learned that we have a great deal in common. We also realized that we were embarking on an ambitious project with immeasurable pitfalls. What if our memories were distorted with the passage of time? We promised each other to stay true to our authentic voices even if they did not always portray events or ourselves in the most flattering light. As we worked through the transitions of inquiry and research, meditation and reflection, awe and abandon to our writing, we revealed stories and shared memories that we thought had long ago faded away.

  In the middle of our discussions about if and how we wanted to share our stories, I attended my 40th high school reunion, talked to old classmates and teachers, and even got a hug from Dr. Lucas, the high school principal at Hillside when both Cindy and I were students. I told a few of them about the book project and received overwhelming interest and promises to purchase a copy once it was published. But more important, their opinions validated my own, regardless of whether they were black or white. We all seemed to believe that the experiment had worked and that we had indeed been its greatest beneficiaries. Former classmates fondly remembered our time together, with many having made tremendous sacrifices to come to the weekend event. Others had used the occasion to visit elderly parents or siblings and other family members still living in the area. Many, like me, lived in Durham or nearby. The reunion of more than 120 alumni and their families, both black and white, reinforced my resolve to finish the project.

  Together, Cindy and I tell our stories of integration in the context of our lives in our different communities. What appears here is the result of reaching far back into our memories to put to paper the feelings that these experiences elicited. This book, I hope, will contribute to the local, state and national discourse on whether there is inherent value in requiring children from different racial and ethnic backgrounds to attend integrated schools together.

  Cindy

  The civil rights movement of the 20th century took place on many stages, but arguably one of the most important was public education. The intention of the Brown v. Board of Education decision of 1954 was to bring equality to the education of black children whose segregation from white students was recognized as counterproductive to that goal. Sending black and white children to the same schools was part of a socialization process as well, with the expectation that children of different races would learn to get along with each other, even if their parents had not. Enforcement of Brown came at a slower pace than “with all deliberate speed” might suggest, but it did eventually come in the late 1960s and early 1970s, after much resistance from white school boards and parents. Racial equality required court-ordered school redistricting and buses, and it required black parents and white parents who were willing to support their children as they ventured into new geographic and social territory. Equality also required children who trusted adults to protect them.

  My schooling was part of this social-change experiment as it played out in Durham, North Carolina, in the 1970s. What difference did it make? I imagine there are as many answers to this question as there were children in school. In this book, LaHoma and I tell our stories of integration that converge with and diverge from each other in telling ways. LaHoma and I did not know each other while we attended the same school. We were two years apart in age and had gone to different junior high schools, having lived in separate parts of a rac
ially segregated city. We did meet each other some 15 years later when we worked for the same organization in Durham doing global public health work. We still did not know each other well because we worked in different departments, and LaHoma eventually left to return to school for a Ph.D.

  LaHoma and I remained in overlapping networks of friends and colleagues; in 2014 we found ourselves part of the writing group she described above with our mutual friend and mentor. During a meeting of this group, over a mushroom and artichoke frittata at a local bakery, LaHoma and I discovered that we both were students at Hillside High School the year she was a sophomore and I was a senior. A torrent of memories took over our discussion that day, and we realized we had a story to tell, made richer by our individual perspectives. In our conversation about the op-ed piece she brought in, we realized we also were similarly concerned about the way Durham schools (and schools everywhere) have reverted to racial segregation because of a combination of white flight and the loss of a court mandate to maintain racial integration.

  The resegregation of schools in Durham that LaHoma writes about reflects a reality across the country. The percentages of black students enrolled in schools in which the student population is 91-100 percent minority (often referred to as ‘hypersegregation’) ranged in 2011 from 34 percent in the South and West to 51 percent in the Northeast, reflecting substantial increases since 1991(2). Learning about this turn of events woke us up to the startling realization that though we had been among the students whose school lives were altered by court decisions to promote racial equality, we had not actually given much further thought to what this meant to us. Nor had we paid close attention to what had happened in the schools since we left high school.

 

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