Racial Injustice In The South Analysis

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In the early 1900s in the South, racial discrimination was very prominent among black people. This lead to unjust punishment such as lynching, and overall mistreatment of black people by whites. Even though slavery was abolished, the treatment towards black people was so terrible it set future generations back. People of color couldn’t lead the life that they deserved, and were instead trapped with very little way to get out. Because of racial injustice in the South, Grant, Miss Emma, Jefferson, and others were treated unfairly, which lead them to be uneducated or act ignorant and they were unable to reach their full potential.

Racial injustice in the South caused Grant to act more uneducated than he actually was and not let him teach his children as well as they deserved. ““She doesn’t, huh?” Sam Guidry asked me. He emphasized doesn’t. I should have said “don’t”. I was being too smart.”...“You’re smart.”
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She spent most of her life working for people who barely appreciated her and had to lower herself to beg those same people to help her. “Tell him what I done done for this family, Mr. Henri, tell him to ask his wife all I done done for this family over the years” (23). Miss Emma had to beg Mr. Henri Pichot to get him to talk to the sheriff. She was a cook and servant for that family and she was trying to make them remember that and see that they owed her. “ “Mr. Henri?” Miss Emma called him, but he kept on walking. “I’ll be up here again tomorrow, Mr. Henri. I’ll be on my knees next time you see me, Mr. Henri””(23). Miss Emma was so desperate she was willing to get on her knees to beg the people that under appreciated her for too long. The way that this society was at that time was made so that the white men and women were always the ones in power, and it was always to their advantage. It left people like Miss Emma groveling to get