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The Color of Friendship
We've been honest about our racial differences—and that's made all the difference!

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LISA AND I seldom interrupt our morning walk to "pig out," but on this particular day I feel more like eating than exercising. So when Lisa calls, I suggest we get some fried okra and collard greens at one of her favorite places to eat, a soul-food restaurant in the inner city.

As we stand at the door of this crowded little restaurant, waiting for a table, it's hard for me to believe I have a white friend who's comfortable in an all-black setting. We're both keenly aware Lisa's is the only white face in a crowd of African Americans. When we finally get a table, our waitress has a rotten attitude. She smiles as she waits on other tables, but whenever she approaches our table, her cheerful disposition turns cold. Poor service accompanies her negative attitude. We repeatedly ask for glasses of water. We never receive butter for our cornbread. With each request, our African-American waitress becomes increasingly irritated.

"This is reverse discrimination," I say to Lisa. "We African Americans know how it feels to be treated like this. Why would we treat others the same way?"

ALTHOUGH I ASK THE QUESTION, I understand the answer too well. I, too, could easily play the "let's hurt white people like they've hurt us" game. When I was in kindergarten, a little freckled-faced white girl named Penny called me a "nigger." Penny's remark proved to be only the first of many derogatory names and behaviors I've endured from members of the white race.

Not long ago, an all-white church board hesitated to hire me for a job in their counseling center because of my color, despite the fact that my qualifications fit the job perfectly. I've been told not to wear my hair in braids or wear African-type clothing or head wraps if I want to be more successful. I've encountered enough racial incidents and innuendoes to keep me entrapped by anger and bitterness for a lifetime.

I carry a sign inside my heart that reads, "Go away, white people. Just leave me alone." But God's made it clear he wants me to take the sign down. Every now and then he sends me a special white friend like Lisa Sinclair who helps me chip away at the racial barriers in my relationships.

Lisa and I met five years ago at a women's retreat. At the time, my family and I were facing a major crisis. The church my husband pastored had asked him to resign. In four short months, my husband had to find another job and we needed to secure another place to live. Lisa's husband works with pastors in the city and they both were familiar with our situation.



I sense God bringing healing and understanding between two women who, at times, view issues differently.


After Lisa and I were introduced, she said something like, "I don't like what that church is doing to you. I just want you to know that. I don't like it one bit." Then she walked away.

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Related Topics
African American, Differences, Friends, Friendship, Race and ethnicity, Racial Reconciliation, Racism

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Denise Alexander Posted: February 05, 2008 6:09 AM
Racism is so easy to think, talk and display and yet that is the challenge for all Christians, to replace those negative and destructive thoughts and actions with real grace. The same grace that God extends to us regardless of where we are at in our walk with Him. That does not mean that it is going to be easy but we need to consciously bring it to the cross, lay it down and allow God to heal, regenerate and bring that change of heart and mind. Thank you for such an honest and challenging article encouraging us to be better people!

Lisa Sinclair Posted: February 07, 2008 7:38 AM
Victoria and I are still friends, still growing together. We haven't walked together in years, but we both know we need to. Victoria and I did have an Africa time together. It grieves me to tell you that Terry is in prison today. We still have different views on things and we still like to argue and love to pray. We still both know that the Cross brings us closer than any other racial, ethnic, economic, or gender marker ever could. It's still hard work, but His work.

 



















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