Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Racial Discrimination :: essays research papers
 Racial Discrimination      "KAFFIR". When you see or hear this word, what runs through your mind? Do you  picture a man with skin the color of the midnight sky, do you see him bending  his muscular body down to the dry earth to pick cotton from thorn-ridden plants?  Can you feel the heat of the sun beating down on his charred back? Perhaps you  can even taste the beads of sweat swelling from his forehead and arms. Or maybe  you are more inclined to visualize a dark-skinned woman with creases in her  forehead made by many years of hard work and endless worrying. You watch her as  she puts the breakfast dishes on the table and addresses her owners with a "yes  sah" or "yes ma'am".    There is nobody to cater to her needs. She spends each day taking care of  everyone but herself. Pain. Sorrow. Anguish. Agony. Is this what comes to your  mind when you hear the word "KAFFIR"? Well, it shouldn't because the word  "kaffir" has nothing to do with the color of your skin. The word "kaffir" is  just that; a word. It is a term that sprouted out of ignorance and continues to  be used to this day exclusively by ignorant people. A kaffir isn't a slang term  for an African; it is a word that describes the person that uses it. This type  of person is one who feeds his ego by dehumanizing those around him when he  feels they are not equal to him. He may regard those of different races or  nationalities as "bad" or "dirty" because they do not have the same skin color  as he does or they may cherish beliefs that are contrary to the ones by which he  lives his life.    These qualities describe the man who tells his son that it is okay to make fun  of people who are different because differences are bad. A child who is  repeatedly told such things will believe them because "mom and dad never lie".  This idea, inculcated in them as children, is like a grain of sand caught in the  clutches of an oyster. It eats away at their minds until it becomes part of them.  Instead of forming into a pearl, it creates a whole new individual that is as  ignorant as the parents who raised him. And so this vicious cycle of ignorance  continues.    Children need to be taught from infancy that people of other races and  nationalities are human too. They think like the rest of us. They have feelings,  hopes, and aspirations. They are intelligent.  					    
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