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TBE NEE WineTE eae ae etic! pausutey! wail tau Sei eel i we Riau bine felt i HE i iinet fauaiten ity iu Ba RUT il nti ail il yee ae uy HH peti a aH Bin Tee ney Wa i] ni baie is Nahedh nltaiy ee Ee veil aus fie LES Nlg ee La i 1s Ht nll us Ho ii Hina | 2 Hi iH i jolt duce te Suri snot le to the state of Georgia. ‘The Negro en te be tel Seva ot Negri Seatac. pe aaeall ae guy ba it ie : 7 it is the reality they have lived with; it is what te men do not want to know. It is not a pretty thing ‘a father and be ultimately dependent on, the kindness of some other man for the well-being of what this evasion of the Negro's humanity hat ration is not s0 well known. The really strike for me, in the South was this dreadful para- at the black men were stronger than the white. T rot know how they did it, but it certainly has some~ ‘do with that as yet unwritten history of the Ne~ it comes to, finally, is that the nation ee ee its lite in the face diminishes a nation as it person, and it can only be described as un- in exactly the same way that the South imag- i “knows” the Negro, the North imagines that “Both campe are deluded. Human free- comple, dificult—and privato— hing 1f we the fire which bums away illusion. Any honest exami- ‘national life proves how far we are from freedom with which we began. standard demands of everyone who ard look at himself, for the greatest in somewhere, and they always eof ths ‘most ry roe Bs niet ay manl ines that thas set dom is of [ niet He They pointed out how Negros ad loved each other, they recount oton and heroiam which the old ord Bhd which, now, would never come Finck men Ttocked at down fren that the Southern liberal had loved for Fw, the Southern ibersi~and net only Poy’oath willing to undergo great inconvenience Ine thel:

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