Pearl's Secret: A Black Man's Search for His White Family
- By Lucinda Moore
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2001, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
"I wanted to show people...that blacks were just as smart, courageous, and strong, if not more so, than any people in America." Yet, in the end, none of this mattered. What was increasingly clear, he says, was "the cancerousness, the sheer wastefulness, of racial prejudice and bigotry, and the sinister way they can replicate themselves from one willing generation to the next."
Henry may not have fashioned the "bridge over the chasm between white and black" that he had hoped for, but he did build a bridge, of sorts, with his great-grandmother. For, ironically, it was a deeper understanding of Pearl, who lived on the edge of two worlds, belonging to neither, that ultimately helps bring together two branches of the disparate family she had longed to see united.
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