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Near Philadelphia, kids of color were allegedly turned away from a private club’s swimming pool (even though they’d ponied up the nearly $2000 entry fee). Upon arrival, the kids’ presence allegedly made the regular pool crowd uncomfortable. Now the blogosphere is abuzz.
“Racism!”
“It’s 2009!!!”
What does that even mean? All I know is that racists are better at acting like they’re not racist. In public.
In defense of the Huntingdon Valley Swim Club they have posted on their website that:
“[They] had originally agreed to invite the camps to use our facility, knowing full well that the children from the camps were from multi-ethnic backgrounds. Unfortunately, [they] quickly learned that we underestimated the capacity of [their] facilities and realized that [they] could not accommodate the number of children from these camps.”
My reading is that the club underestimated how their members would react. Underlying feelings surfaced, perhaps. One camper was quoted by NBC’s Philadelphia affiliate as saying:
“I heard this lady, she was like, ‘Uh, what are all these black kids doing here?’ She’s like, ‘I’m scared they might do something to my child.'” Ouch.
Ironically, 90 years ago this month, Chicago saw one of the bloodiest race riots in American History during the Red Summer of 1919. The irony? That riot started when a black boy allegedly floated into “white water” at what was then 26th Street Beach. Neighborhoods became battlefields. Veterans, black and white, (newly home from World War One) made Trenches out of Boulevards.
At the end of thirteen days of skirmishes, 38 Chicagoans were dead (23 blacks and 15 whites), 537 injured, and 1,000 black families were homeless.
How far we’ve come.
The Color of Water
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Near Philadelphia, kids of color were allegedly turned away from a private club’s swimming pool (even though they’d ponied up the nearly $2000 entry fee). Upon arrival, the kids’ presence allegedly made the regular pool crowd uncomfortable. Now the blogosphere is abuzz.
“Racism!”
“It’s 2009!!!”
What does that even mean? All I know is that racists are better at acting like they’re not racist. In public.
In defense of the Huntingdon Valley Swim Club they have posted on their website that:
“[They] had originally agreed to invite the camps to use our facility, knowing full well that the children from the camps were from multi-ethnic backgrounds. Unfortunately, [they] quickly learned that we underestimated the capacity of [their] facilities and realized that [they] could not accommodate the number of children from these camps.”
My reading is that the club underestimated how their members would react. Underlying feelings surfaced, perhaps. One camper was quoted by NBC’s Philadelphia affiliate as saying:
“I heard this lady, she was like, ‘Uh, what are all these black kids doing here?’ She’s like, ‘I’m scared they might do something to my child.'” Ouch.
Ironically, 90 years ago this month, Chicago saw one of the bloodiest race riots in American History during the Red Summer of 1919. The irony? That riot started when a black boy allegedly floated into “white water” at what was then 26th Street Beach. Neighborhoods became battlefields. Veterans, black and white, (newly home from World War One) made Trenches out of Boulevards.
At the end of thirteen days of skirmishes, 38 Chicagoans were dead (23 blacks and 15 whites), 537 injured, and 1,000 black families were homeless.
How far we’ve come.
Leave a comment | tags: 1919, Chicago Riots, Huntingdon Valley Swim Club, Philadelphia, Race, Red Summer of 1919, swimming | posted in Chicago Cultural History, Commentary