I'm not a person who has great dramatic things happen to him. I don't
think I could ever be converted on a road to any Damascus. So I don't
want to give you the wrong impression about this story I'm about to tell
you. It meant a lot to me, but I think it also tells a little bit about
what Emory was like then, and, more important, about what we all were
like in the late forties and early fifties. Mentioning that Political
Science Club—that's what we called it, it was a club of political
science majors—reminded me of another thing that happened. I suggested
to these majors that we have somebody from Atlanta University. They had
never thought of that. Bell Wiley has helped me. Bell used to go out to
various things at the Atlanta University Center, and he took me with him
once or twice. So I'd met a couple people there. I'd
run across Bill Boyd. I think all I'd done was shake hands with him.
Bill Boyd was Professor of Political Science at Atlanta University. And
the Political Science Club authorized me to invite Bill Boyd to a
meeting. I think I mentioned this to Lynwood Holland, and I learned that
he had never met this man. Nobody in my department had ever met him.
This whole episode was a real learning experience for me, because I
reflected on that. No one in the Emory Political Science Department had
ever met the Professor of Political Science at Atlanta University. Also,
they didn't know what his specialty was.
I called him up, and I asked him to come out and talk. He said, "What do
you want me to talk about?" That sort of stumped me. I don't know quite
how I got through with that, but I got over the idea somehow that he
should come out and talk with us about race relations. So he came. He
was probably in his late thirties at that time. He was a cold, very
reserved fellow. He had a certain stature around the city. Blacks
thought of him as a prime intellectual. He died about two years later,
of leukemia.
He had this manner about him. He was one of those people who just
demanded, by his manner, to be treated like a peer. There was nothing
"southern" about him at all. He'd gone to the University of Michigan,
and he was a specialist in international relations. As he told me later,
he had seen where Ralph Bunch went and was setting his career in the
same lines. Colonialism was a special interest. He began talking. There
was just this bunch of students and me, one evening, out there at Emory,
and I really went through a whole lot of intellectual development that
evening. As he began to talk, I knew that I should not have asked him to talk about international relations. All of
these students were southern, but he began telling them what it was to
be a black man in the South. He began describing what he and his family
went through when they drove to Washington—how you had to know where to
stop, how you had sometimes to go to the woods, and all that. I sat
there, and I heard all this, and I just had never thought of it before.
I really hadn't, in those terms. There'd been a big thing in Atlanta,
Hopalong Cassidy had come to town. All the kids wanted to go and see
Hopalong Cassidy. We'd taken Linda down there. Now he talked about
Hopalong Cassidy. He said, "My child came home and wanted to see
Hopalong Cassidy. What did I tell her?" An elephant had died in the damn
zoo at Grant Park, and all the kids in the schools were taking up
collections to buy a new elephant. We sent a dime. He said, "You know,
they took up a collection at the zoo in our child's classroom to buy a
new elephant. How do we tell our daughter that she can't go see that
elephant once it's bought?"
He kept saying all these things, and I kept listening. I'd never really
thought in these terms. That was a second revelation I had, but I had
another one. It suddenly dawned on me that he hadn't said a single thing
that I needed to hear, in the sense that anything that he had said, I
could have figured out for myself if I'd ever given it one moment's
thought. If I had ever asked myself what a black man has to endure
driving his family north, I could have figured out every bit of that
scenario. But I'd never done that. He hadn't told me a thing that I
needed to be told. I've felt that way ever since, mostly, although black
people keep educating me. After very nearly every bit of education I've ever had, I've been able to lean back and tell
myself, I didn't need to be told that. You just really should not have
to be told.
After all this was over, Bill Boyd and I went back to my office. I'm not
usually a very self-divulging person, but I felt that I should be. I
said, "I want to apologize to you for asking you out here to talk about
race and the South. I should have asked you out to talk about
international relations, and I apologize." He was not an out-going
fellow, but he sort of nodded. For the rest of the time I was in
Atlanta, he was somebody I could talk with. It was really a great shame
that he died. He would have been an important figure. That experience
meant an awful lot to me.