|

This text was contributed by Liz Rohan, a graduate student at the Center
for Writing Studies, at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.
The
Detroit Metropolitan Area is very segregated. This and [the city's] racist
history doesn't help to foster much integration or racial cooperation once
members of the Detroit community attend college together. Or at least this was
my experience more than ten years ago when I was an undergraduate at the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, in the late 1980s. For my major, American
Culture, I took several African American courses in which I
"mingled" with African Americans, but I never really got to know any
African Americans on a personal level. Fortunately, my sophomore year of
college I did get to be friends with an African American woman in my French
class; let's call her Deanna. Deanna and I bonded in this last semester of
French, a class we both needed to complete the language requirement at the
university. Neither of us were very good French students. Deanna's friend, who
was also an African American woman, was a French star. Before and after class
the three of us teased each other about our French skills, good and bad. Our
T.A. wasn't very sympathetic to those who were having a harder time in the
class, like Deanna and myself, a difficulty exacerbated by the fact that the
course was accelerated. The class met three hours a day, four days of
week--which translated to at least three hours of homework, on top of time
spent in class. All in all, too much French. Deanna and I shared some homework
during the semester and we studied together one afternoon.
On the last day of class, Deanna and I were ecstatic to be done with French
and chatted on our way out of class. It was a gorgeous June day and I felt a
great burden lifted from my shoulders. I didn't even care if I didn't pass the
final exam, as long as I was done with French. As Deanna and I walked from
class, we discovered that we both needed to get on a bus to go to North
Campus, where she lived and where I worked.
As we walked toward the bus, Deanna passed a group of her friends all of whom
were African Americans. Her friends, mostly guys, shouted various cryptic
salutations to her as we passed them. Suddenly, it became very tense. It
seemed to me that Deanna felt awkward and conflicted about walking past people
she knew when she was with me. I assumed this was because I was white. As we
got on the bus, and sat down next to one another, the tension thickened. Her
friends outside the bus continued to shout things at her. They seemed friendly
but they were obviously teasing her about something.
As we traveled the few miles to North Campus, Deanna told me that she didn't
like Ann Arbor very much because there was "nothing to do." She was
used to the city where there was always something going on. I nodded at her
and she asked where I was from. I told her I was from Grosse Pointe (a white
suburb directly outside of Detroit legendary for its property laws excluding
blacks from buying property in its environments).
Deanna looked even more uncomfortable when she told me that her aunt had
bought a house there, but eventually had to move after her property was
vandalized by her neighbors.
I didn't know what to say to Deanna then. I think I said something to the
effect that it was too bad there were people like that in Grosse Pointe. But
not everybody was like that. 
|