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[3 of 5] Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood, Part II, Chapters 9-14, by Trevor Noah (2019)

Author: Trevor Noah

“Part 2, Chapters 9 - 14.” Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood, by Trevor Noah, Spiegel & Grau, 2019.


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PART II

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Feb 16
imeria k (Feb 16 2021 5:53PM) : why is there slavery in Africa [Edited]
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Jun 6
AKUMANI S (Jun 06 2022 1:10PM) : No slavery was in africa because some people do have places to stay
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Feb 18
Daniel C (Feb 18 2021 8:24AM) : what war was there at africa ?
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Feb 18
Daniel C (Feb 18 2021 8:30AM) : why dont africans have lunch rooms
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Feb 18
Yojannis M (Feb 18 2021 6:58PM) : how did the slavery started in africa ?
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saniya f (Mar 20 2021 10:02PM) : When did slavery start in Africa?
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Jun 7
AKUMANI S (Jun 07 2022 1:24PM) : how long has slavery been going on
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When Dutch colonists landed at the southern tip of Africa over three hundred years ago, they encountered an indigenous people known as the Khoisan. The Khoisan are the Native Americans of South Africa, a lost tribe of bushmen, nomadic hunter-gatherers distinct from the darker, Bantu-speaking peoples who later migrated south to become the Zulu, Xhosa, and Sotho tribes of modern South Africa. While settling in Cape Town and the surrounding frontier, the white colonists had their way with the Khoisan women, and the first mixed people of South Africa were born.

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Oct 29
Jessica H (Oct 29 2020 8:38AM) : Every anthropology major (like me)has to read about the Khoisan, but I always confused the word with the word "Xhosa". Now it's clear.
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Feb 16
james a (Feb 16 2021 9:43AM) : in they place why are they hard on races mixing
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Feb 17
YNiyah B (Feb 17 2021 8:43AM) : I Dont Understand Why The Indigenous People Migrated South Due To The Dutch Colonist.
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Mar 17
Ziyair D (Mar 17 2021 11:45PM) : . more

same smh

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Jun 6
AKUMANI S (Jun 06 2022 1:12PM) : The people migrated south dutch
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May 31
Mohammed A (May 31 2022 12:50PM) : how is it like to be a slave
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Raniyah L (Feb 20 2021 4:21PM) : My Question more

who started slavery in South Africa?

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Mar 20
saniya f (Mar 20 2021 10:03PM) : I bet it was those white people.SMH [Edited]
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 12:46PM) : why does most african tribes like migrating to other part of their own country?
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May 31
Maxwel R (May 31 2022 12:43PM) : What does "Bushmen" Means?
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To work the colonists’ farms, slaves were soon imported from different corners of the Dutch empire, from West Africa, Madagascar, and the East Indies. The slaves and the Khoisan intermarried, and the white colonists continued to dip in and take their liberties, and over time the Khoisan all but disappeared from South Africa. While most were killed off through disease, famine, and war, the rest of their bloodline was bred out of existence, mixed in with the descendants of whites and slaves to form an entirely new race of people: coloreds. Colored people are a hybrid, a complete mix. Some are light and some are dark. Some have Asian features, some have white features, some have black features. It’s not uncommon for a colored man and a colored woman to have a child that looks nothing like either parent.

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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:03PM) : what is colonist?
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May 31
Mohammed A (May 31 2022 12:40PM) : how many empires were control by the Dutch in Africa?
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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:04PM) : To work the colonists’ farms, slaves were soon imported from different corners of the Dutch empire, from West Africa, Madagascar, and the East Indies.
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:05PM) : what is famine?
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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:16AM) : Colored people have many different outcomes of skin color when born.
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Feb 16
Daniel C (Feb 16 2021 9:54AM) : i agree more

and i feel bad that people try to judge them for something that they cant control

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Feb 16
Isabel V (Feb 16 2021 11:31AM) : agreement more

I agree with you

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Feb 16
Samuel R (Feb 16 2021 1:18PM) : what about people just being people?
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Feb 17
saniya f (Feb 17 2021 11:43PM) : Same,SMH more
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Feb 20
Raniyah L (Feb 20 2021 4:22PM) : I agree more

Same, I dislike when people judge people for something they already having trouble with and no control over.

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Mar 17
Ziyair D (Mar 17 2021 11:46PM) : . more

me too smh

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Feb 17
Melody C (Feb 17 2021 2:51AM) : I agree with you colored people been through a lot and faced many hatred towards them.
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Feb 17
YNiyah B (Feb 17 2021 8:39AM) : I Honestly Agree Because Colored People Face Hatred For Being A Different Color From Others.
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Feb 20
Raniyah L (Feb 20 2021 4:23PM) : I agree more

I agree because that is how society is. They judge because of color, this is how society been years ago…

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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:06PM) : slaves and the Khoisan intermarried, and the white colonists continued to dip in and take their liberties, and over time the Khoisan [Edited]
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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:09PM) : colored people are a hybird, a complete mix
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The curse that colored people carry is having no clearly defined heritage to go back to. If they trace their lineage back far enough, at a certain point it splits into white and native and a tangled web of “other.” Since their native mothers are gone, their strongest affinity has always been with their white fathers, the Afrikaners. Most colored people don’t speak African languages. They speak Afrikaans. Their religion, their institutions, all of the things that shaped their culture came from Afrikaners.

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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:11PM) : their religion their institutions
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:09PM) : what is the afrikaners language.
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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:47PM) : Why did they speak different language
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The history of colored people in South Africa is, in this respect, worse than the history of black people in South Africa. For all that black people have suffered, they know who they are. Colored people don’t.

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Oct 19
Jessica H (Oct 19 2020 11:06AM) : That’s heavy.
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Mar 17
Ziyair D (Mar 17 2021 11:46PM) : . more

fr just sad

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Feb 16
Dasani D (Feb 16 2021 9:49AM) : that's heavy.
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Feb 16
Samuel R (Feb 16 2021 10:46AM) : heavy! more

Race in South Africa and America is super heavy and complex. Does this sentence make you have more empathy for Trevor Noah, and other mixed-race folks.

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Feb 16
Isabel V (Feb 16 2021 11:32AM) : I agree
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Feb 16
Zahir M (Feb 16 2021 3:21PM) : This makes me have more empathy for mixed people because they are lost because no one has guided for they could figure out who they are.
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Feb 17
Iajanay O (Feb 17 2021 2:13PM) : i agree and i feel as though that is unfair
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Feb 17
Iajanay O (Feb 17 2021 2:13PM) : i agree
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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:13PM) : for all that black have suffered they know who they are colored people
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Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 10:58AM) : I didn’t realize how excluded people who have no trace of their cultural backgrounds could feel
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(Nov 12 2020 4:39PM) : Have you ever known anybody like this? Does this give you more empathy for them? What does this imply about how important it is to understand your own cultural background? How have you grown to know these things for yourself? Who has heled you most?
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Feb 17
Iajanay O (Feb 17 2021 2:14PM) : same it hurts me to know they have no background
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:12PM) : why the history of colored people in south africa are worse than black africa.
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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:27AM) : This shows that it was hard for Trevor to know what his culture is because he was mixed with two races white and South African.
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Feb 16
Isabel V (Feb 16 2021 11:32AM) : I agree
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Feb 17
Melody C (Feb 17 2021 3:03AM) : I agree Trevor faced many obstacle and many people misjudged him or treated him differently because of his race. He did not have full knowledge of his race.
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Feb 17
YNiyah B (Feb 17 2021 8:46AM) : I Agree Trevor Couldnt Really Spend Quality Time Wit His Parents In Public When He Was Younger Due To Apartheid.
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May 23
ERNAIDA O (May 23 2022 1:09PM) : at least there's one group that doesn't suffer that much

9 THE MULBERRY TREE

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At the end of our street in Eden Park, right in a bend at the top of the road, stood a giant mulberry tree growing out of someone’s front yard. Every year when it bore fruit the neighborhood kids would go and pick berries from it, eating as many as they could and filling up bags to take home. They would all play under the tree together. I had to play under the tree by myself. I didn’t have any friends in Eden Park.

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Jun 13
Jessenia C (Jun 13 2022 11:53PM) : having no friends is something that kids go threw a lot
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Jun 13
Jessenia C (Jun 13 2022 11:55PM) : playing under the tree was rare for him because there was no under tree friends
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I was the anomaly wherever we lived. In Hillbrow, we lived in a white area, and nobody looked like me. In Soweto, we lived in a black area, and nobody looked like me. Eden Park was a colored area. In Eden Park, everyone looked like me, but we couldn’t have been more different. It was the biggest mindfuck I’ve ever experienced.

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Oct 29
Jessica H (Oct 29 2020 9:14AM) : No wonder he became a chameleon.
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Jun 13
Jessenia C (Jun 13 2022 11:59PM) : having to go threw racist is something a little kid should not go threw
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:18PM) : why is Eden park differnt.
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Jun 6
AKUMANI S (Jun 06 2022 1:14PM) : It was the biggest mindfuck l've ever experienced
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The animosity I felt from the colored people I encountered growing up was one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to deal with. It taught me that it is easier to be an insider as an outsider than to be an outsider as an insider. If a white guy chooses to immerse himself in hip-hop culture and only hang out with black people, black people will say, “Cool, white guy. Do what you need to do.” If a black guy chooses to button up his blackness to live among white people and play lots of golf, white people will say, “Fine. I like Brian. He’s safe.” But try being a black person who immerses himself in white culture while still living in the black community. Try being a white person who adopts the trappings of black culture while still living in the white community. You will face more hate and ridicule and ostracism than you can even begin to fathom. People are willing to accept you if they see you as an outsider trying to assimilate into their world. But when they see you as a fellow tribe member attempting to disavow the tribe, that is something they will never forgive. That is what happened to me in Eden Park.

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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 11:02AM) : When your among your own people acting like the outsiders they mistreat you , but if your an outsider acting like their insiders they celebrate you
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Feb 16
Isabel V (Feb 16 2021 2:22PM) : True that's a good point
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Feb 16
Anissa E (Feb 16 2021 2:54PM) : I agree.. more

Anissa Elahi

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Feb 17
YNiyah B (Feb 17 2021 8:48AM) : I Truely Agree
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Feb 17
Aziyah N (Feb 17 2021 2:22PM) : I 100% agree with this statement.
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Feb 17
Melody C (Feb 17 2021 3:07AM) : It must been pretty hard for him growing up because people would look at him differently and treated him like an outsider. [Edited]
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Feb 17
Ashanti T (Feb 17 2021 9:51AM) : I Agree more

i agree with Melody because when he was growing up he was treated way different from his other family members.

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Mar 17
Ziyair D (Mar 17 2021 11:48PM) : . more

I agree 100%

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Jun 6
AKUMANI S (Jun 06 2022 1:16PM) : Try being a white person who adopts the trappings of black culture while still living in the white community.
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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:33PM) : its a true statement
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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:32AM) : It was hard for Trevor to make friends with the kids in his community because he didn't act the same as most of the kids. So he mostly stood to himself as a kid.
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Feb 16
Zahir M (Feb 16 2021 3:25PM) : He probably felt really lonely as a child.
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May 31
Mohammed A (May 31 2022 12:42PM) : what is ostracism?
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When apartheid came, colored people defied easy categorization, so the system used them—quite brilliantly—to sow confusion, hatred, and mistrust. For the purposes of the state, colored people became the almost-whites. They were second-class citizens, denied the rights of white people but given special privileges that black people didn’t have, just to keep them holding out for more. Afrikaners used to call them amperbaas: “the almost-boss.” The almost-master. “You’re almost there. You’re so close. You’re this close to being white. Pity your grandfather couldn’t keep his hands off the chocolate, eh? But it’s not your fault you’re colored, so keep trying. Because if you work hard enough you can erase this taint from your bloodline. Keep on marrying lighter and whiter and don’t touch the chocolate and maybe, maybe, someday, if you’re lucky, you can become white.”

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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 11:04AM) : Wow , they only see success and hope in people if there’s white in them and then talk them into to “making the bloodline pure “ cause then and only then will they feel as though they will succeed and achieve great things
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Mar 17
Ziyair D (Mar 17 2021 11:51PM) : . more

fr smh

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Feb 16
james a (Feb 16 2021 9:50AM) : same i think it should be equally fair
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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:15PM) : Afrikaners used to call them names
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May 31
Mohammed A (May 31 2022 12:43PM) : why colored people were called second class citizens.
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Which seems ridiculous, but it would happen. Every year under apartheid, some colored people would get promoted to white. It wasn’t a myth; it was real. People could submit applications to the government. Your hair might become straight enough, your skin might become light enough, your accent might become polished enough—and you’d be reclassified as white. All you had to do was denounce your people, denounce your history, and leave your darker-skinned friends and family behind.

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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 11:05AM) : You’d have to give up who you truly are , leave behind your loved ones , just so you can become someone that your not , so you can succeed
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Paul A

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(Nov 12 2020 5:15PM) : Maybe it seems obvious, but I wish you would say more about how you feel about this injustice and what we might do to change it -- if anything.
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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:35PM) : why would they be racist in a country where they are almost the same
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May 23
ERNAIDA O (May 23 2022 1:18PM) : this sounds crazy, is basically making you decide to be white
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May 31
Maxwel R (May 31 2022 12:49PM) : This is crazy on God.
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:22PM) : most africans turn their back to their own culture with they see money.
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May 26
ERNAIDA O (May 26 2022 1:04PM) : thats so sad, literally leaving your roots in a side

The legal definition of a white person under apartheid was “one who in appearance is obviously a white person who is generally not accepted as a coloured person; or is generally accepted as a white person and is not in appearance obviously a white person.” It was completely arbitrary, in other words. That’s where the government came up with things like the pencil test. If you were applying to be white, the pencil went into your hair. If it fell out, you were white. If it stayed in, you were colored. You were what the government said you were. Sometimes that came down to a lone clerk eyeballing your face and making a snap decision. Depending on how high your cheekbones were or how broad your nose was, he could tick whatever box made sense to him, thereby deciding where you could live, whom you could marry, what jobs and rights and privileges you were allowed.

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Oct 29
Jessica H (Oct 29 2020 10:38AM) : It's crazy that you have to submit paperwork on what race you are.
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Feb 16
james a (Feb 16 2021 9:51AM) : rs if you have black in you you are black
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Feb 16
Zahir M (Feb 16 2021 3:29PM) : This is crazy so you have to abandon who you are as a person and abandon your family if they are to dark this is so messed up.
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Feb 17
Melody C (Feb 17 2021 3:15AM) : I agree!!!
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Feb 17
YNiyah B (Feb 17 2021 8:50AM) : Honestly Cause Whats The Point Of Doin A Paper On Ya Race...Type Sense Does That Make If They Knew That He Was Biracial.
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Feb 17
Ashanti T (Feb 17 2021 9:54AM) : it is crazy more

why do they have to sumbit paperwork on what race they are? what if they are if they are mixed races? It is just crazy and i think that it is not right.

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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:22PM) : what is apartheld?
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And colored people didn’t just get promoted to white. Sometimes colored people became Indian. Sometimes Indian people became colored. Sometimes blacks were promoted to colored, and sometimes coloreds were demoted to black. And of course whites could be demoted to colored as well. That was key. Those mixed bloodlines were always lurking, waiting to peek out, and fear of losing their status kept white people in line. If two white parents had a child and the government decided that child was too dark, even if both parents produced documentation proving they were white, the child could be classified as colored, and the family had to make a decision. Do they give up their white status to go and live as colored people in a colored area? Or would they split up, the mother taking the colored child to live in the ghetto while the father stayed white to make a living to support them?

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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 11:07AM) : So the color of your skin played a role in success
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Paul A

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(Nov 12 2020 4:24PM) : Maybe, but I think what he is saying here is complex. Tell me more about what you think "success" means in this case. Do you find that race works this way in your community... in NYC... in the US?
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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 6:14PM) : I think success in this case means like “the whiter you are the more likely Opportunities will be opened to you “ and with access to opportunities comes success but because of the Denied opportunities the black race got , they aren’t able to progress
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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 6:17PM) : I do feel like there aren’t many opportunities in the Ghetto and it’s not a shock that most poc live in the ghetto since it’s in rooted in racism , and America has done a lot of things in order to keep certain races from progressing
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Mar 17
Ziyair D (Mar 17 2021 11:53PM) : . more

crazy smh

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Dec 17
Hope I (Dec 17 2020 12:11PM) : Compare and contrast more

Black people were treated differently from white people when it came to job opportunities. A white person was more likely to get hired then a black person.

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Feb 17
Melody C (Feb 17 2021 3:18AM) : I agree because I feel like white people have a lot of privilege.
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Feb 17
Ashanti T (Feb 17 2021 9:59AM) : I agree more

i do think that whites people get more privilege then any other race. i think this because if you really think to all different jobs in America you see that it is most white.

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May 23
ERNAIDA O (May 23 2022 1:24PM) : this sounds like a rank but in this case with races
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Feb 20
Raniyah L (Feb 20 2021 4:45PM) : Question more

How did another color become another color?

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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:37PM) : the government can't just do that...
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:24PM) : no because they wants to be leaders.
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Many colored people lived in this limbo, a true purgatory, always yearning for the white fathers who disowned them, and they could be horribly racist to one another as a result. The most common colored slur was boesman. “Bushman.” “Bushie.” Because it called out their blackness, their primitiveness. The worst way to insult a colored person was to infer that they were in some way black. One of

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the most sinister things about apartheid was that it taught colored people that it was black people who were holding them back. Apartheid said that the only reason colored people couldn’t have first-class status was because black people might use coloredness to sneak past the gates to enjoy the benefits of whiteness.

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That’s what apartheid did: It convinced every group that it was because of the other race that they didn’t get into the club. It’s basically the bouncer at the door telling you, “We can’t let you in because of your friend Darren and his ugly shoes.” So you look at Darren and say, “Screw you, Black Darren. You’re holding me back.” Then when Darren goes up, the bouncer says, “No, it’s actually your friend Sizwe and his weird hair.” So Darren says, “Screw you, Sizwe,” and now everyone hates everyone. But the truth is that none of you were ever getting into that club.

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Oct 29
Jessica H (Oct 29 2020 10:42AM) : They used divide and conquer.
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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:40PM) : people were hating each other thinking he/she is better than that certain person even tho they are actually the same
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Colored people had it rough. Imagine: You’ve been brainwashed into believing that your blood is tainted. You’ve spent all your time assimilating and aspiring to whiteness. Then, just as you think you’re closing in on the finish line, some fucking guy named Nelson Mandela comes along and flips the country on its head. Now the finish line is back where the starting line was, and the benchmark is black. Black is in charge. Black is beautiful. Black is powerful. For centuries colored people were told: Blacks are monkeys. Don’t swing from the trees like them. Learn to walk upright like the white man. Then all of a sudden it’s Planet of the Apes, and the monkeys have taken over.

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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:33PM) : why black people are brainwashed
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Feb 16
Anissa E (Feb 16 2021 3:01PM) : Colored people had it rough. Imagine : you've brainwashed into believeing
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Feb 17
Melody C (Feb 17 2021 3:19AM) : I agree!!!!
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Feb 17
YNiyah B (Feb 17 2021 8:51AM) : Rs. I Agree.
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Feb 20
Raniyah L (Feb 20 2021 4:41PM) : I agree [Edited] more

I agree, white kid’s parents definitely brainwashed the white kids into believing that. Nobody just comes into this world believing that, that it is taught to them.

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Mar 17
Ziyair D (Mar 17 2021 11:55PM) : ,, more

I agree people are not born that way it’s taught

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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:35PM) : how important was Nelson Mandela south africans
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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:41PM) : that was stupid because you have no right to think you are better than others because of your skin color
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May 25
Mohammed A (May 25 2022 1:35PM) : this is sad
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So you can imagine how weird it was for me. I was mixed but not colored—colored by complexion but not by culture. Because of that I was seen as a colored person who didn’t want to be colored.

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Jun 13
Maxwel R (Jun 13 2022 10:51AM) : That is crazy
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In Eden Park, I encountered two types of colored people. Some colored people hated me because of my blackness. My hair was curly and I was proud of my Afro. I spoke African languages and loved speaking them. People would hear me speaking Xhosa or Zulu and they’d say, “Wat is jy? ’n Boesman?” “What are you, a Bushman?” Why are you trying to be black? Why do you speak that click-click language? Look at your light skin. You’re almost there and you’re throwing it away.

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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 11:11AM) : So he got hate for embracing his blackness
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I’m the Tech Liaison for the New York City Writing Project. I… (more)

Nov 12
Paul A

I’m the Tech Liaison for the New York City Writing Project. I… (more)

(Nov 12 2020 4:10PM) : Hate from different directions. How do you feel about this? Are you saying that it's not such a big deal or that it is important to work through your feelings when confronted with this kind of approbation? more

What do you think is important about this problem? Have you ever faced similar feelings of being in the middle and being misunderstood on both sides?

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Nov 12
Brendaly N (Nov 12 2020 6:23PM) : I feel like someone shouldn’t be ridiculed for embracing their other half, what’s important about this problem is that someone shouldn’t feel shame or be degraded for embracing who they, but these kids were taught that who they are was lesser then
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Feb 16
Zahir M (Feb 16 2021 3:37PM) : So they hated him because he wanted to embrace his blackness but they were trying to tell him that he is wasting his chance to be white so I guess they are just jealous of the chance he has to be white and he isn't taking it.
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May 31
Mohammed A (May 31 2022 12:45PM) : why south africans have many native languages?
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Other colored people hated me because of my whiteness. Even though I identified as being black, I had a white father. I went to an English private school. I’d learned to get along with white people at church. I could speak perfect English, and I barely spoke Afrikaans, the language colored people were supposed to speak. So colored people thought that I thought I was better than them. They would mock my accent, like I was putting on airs. “Dink jy, jy is grênd?” “You think you’re high class?”—uppity, people would say in America.

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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:44PM) : no matter what you do people will always judge you
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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:36AM) : The other colored kids would be jealous of Trevor because of the fact that he knew how to speak fluent English.They thought that he was trying to be better than them but that was just the language that Trevor was used to speaking.
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Even when I thought I was liked, I wasn’t. One year I got a brand-new bike during the summer holidays. My cousin Mlungisi and I were taking turns riding around the block. I was riding up our street when this cute colored girl came out to the road and stopped me. She smiled and waved to me sweetly. “Hey,” she said, “can I ride your bike?”

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I was completely shocked. Oh, wow, I thought, I made a friend. “Yeah, of course,” I said.

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I got off and she got on and rode about twenty or thirty feet. Some random older kid came running up to the street, she stopped and got off, and he climbed on and rode away. I was so happy that a girl had spoken to me that it didn’t fully sink in that they’d stolen my bicycle. I ran back home, smiling and skipping along. My cousin asked where the bicycle was. I told him.

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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:38AM) : Trevor thought that this girl wanted to be his friend but instead she helped a kid steal Trevor's bike.
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Feb 16
Samuel R (Feb 16 2021 10:48AM) : I have seen this before
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Feb 16
Anissa E (Feb 16 2021 3:41PM) : Anissa Elahi more

I feel like he shouldve knew the way she was acting but then how could we expect him to know if she was being nice ?

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Mar 18
Ziyair D (Mar 18 2021 12:02AM) : . more

they set him up smh he got it back though

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“Trevor, you’ve been robbed,” he said. “Why didn’t you chase them?” “I thought they were being nice. I thought I’d made a friend.”

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Mlungisi was older, my protector. He ran off and found the kids, and thirty minutes later he came back with my bike.

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Feb 16
Zahir M (Feb 16 2021 3:44PM) : But his cousin actually had his back an helped him out and seems to be not afraid of Trevor because some family members of his are scared that he looks white and treats him different but his cousin treats him like family.
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Things like that happened a lot. I was bullied all the time. The incident at the mulberry tree was probably the worst of them. Late one afternoon I was playing by myself like I always did, running around the neighborhood. This group of five or six colored boys was up the street picking berries off the mulberry tree and eating them. I went over and started picking some to take home for myself. The boys were a few years older than me, around twelve or thirteen. They didn’t talk to me, and I didn’t talk to them. They were speaking to one another in Afrikaans, and I could understand what they were saying. Then one of them, this kid who was the ringleader of the group, walked over. “Mag ek jou moerbeie sien?” “Can I see your mulberries?” My first thought, again, was, Oh, cool. I made a friend. I held up my hand and showed him my mulberries. Then he knocked them out of my hand and smushed them into the ground. The other kids started laughing. I stood there and looked at him a moment. By that point I’d developed thick skin. I was used to being bullied. I shrugged it off and went back to picking berries.

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May 31
Mohammed A (May 31 2022 12:47PM) : africas are like that. they treat you differently if you are not from the same background.
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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:40AM) : This shows that Trevor was constantly treated wrong and taken advantage of because the kids did not like him.
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May 31
ERNAIDA O (May 31 2022 12:57PM) : thats such a bad attitude
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Clearly not getting the reaction he wanted, this kid started cursing me out. “Fok weg, jou onnosele Boesman!” “Get the fuck out of here! Go away, you stupid Bushie! Bushman!” I ignored him and went on about my business. Then I felt a splat! on the back of my head. He’d hit me with a mulberry. It wasn’t painful, just startling. I turned to look at him and, splat!, he hit me again, right in my face.

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May 31
Mohammed A (May 31 2022 12:48PM) : he will never feel the same
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Then, in a split second, before I could even react, all of these kids started pelting me with berries, pelting the shit out of me. Some of the berries weren’t ripe, and they stung like rocks. I tried to cover my face with my hands, but there was a barrage coming at me from all sides. They were laughing and pelting me and calling me names. “Bushie! Bushman!” I was terrified. Just the suddenness of it, I didn’t know what to do. I started crying, and I ran. I ran for my life, all the way back down the road to our house.

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When I ran inside I looked like I’d been beaten to a pulp because I was bawling my eyes out and was covered in red-purple berry juice. My mother looked at me, horrified.

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“What happened?”

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In between sobs I told her the story. “These kids…the mulberry tree…they threw berries at me…” When I finished, she burst out laughing. “It’s not funny!” I said.

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“No, no, Trevor,” she said. “I’m not laughing because it’s funny. I’m laughing out of relief. I thought you’d been beaten up. I thought this was blood. I’m laughing because it’s only berry juice.”

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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:49PM) : at least he got away because they probably could have done something like beat him up
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My mom thought everything was funny. There was no subject too dark or too painful for her to tackle with humor. “Look on the bright side,” she said, laughing and pointing to the half of me covered in dark berry juice. “Now you really are half black and half white.”

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Jun 6
ERNAIDA O (Jun 06 2022 1:21PM) : that's something that would make me mad
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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:43AM) : Trevor's mom always tried making things funny although they were quite awful. This shows that Trevor's mom is not someone that likes to take stuff serious and likes to be a happy person.

“It’s not funny!”

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“Trevor, you’re okay,” she said. “Go and wash up. You’re not hurt. You’re hurt emotionally. But you’re not hurt.”

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Half an hour later, Abel showed up. At that point Abel was still my mom’s boyfriend. He wasn’t trying to be my father or even a stepfather, really. He was more like a big brother than anything. He’d joke around with me, have fun. I didn’t know him that well, but one thing I did know about him was that he had a temper. Very charming when he wanted to be, incredibly funny, but fuck he could be mean. He’d grown up in the homelands, where you had to fight to survive. Abel was big, too, around six-foot-three, long and lean. He hadn’t hit my mom yet. He hadn’t hit me yet, either. But I knew he was dangerous. I’d seen it. Someone would cut us off in traffic. Abel would yell out the window. The other guy would honk and yell back. In a flash Abel would be out of our car, over to theirs, grabbing the guy through the driver’s-side window, screaming in his face, raising a fist. You’d see the other guy panic. “Whoa, whoa, whoa. I’m sorry, I’m sorry.”

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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:46AM) : Although Abel have not hit Trevor or his mom Trevor knew it could be possible because of this incident.
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When Abel walked in that night, he sat down on the couch and saw that I’d been crying.

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“What happened?” he said.

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I started to explain. My mother cut me off. “Don’t tell him,” she said. She knew what would happen. She knew better than me.

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Jun 13
Maxwel R (Jun 13 2022 10:58AM) : That is stupid, because if you tell him don't tell him in front of Abel he will be more interested to know.
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“Don’t tell me what?” Abel said. “It’s nothing,” she said.

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“It’s not nothing,” I said.

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She glared at me. “Don’t tell him.”

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Abel was getting frustrated. “What? Don’t tell me what?”

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He’d been drinking; he never came home from work sober, and the drinking always made his temper worse. It was strange, but in that moment I realized that if I said the right things I could get him to step in and do something. We were almost family, and I knew if I made him feel like his family had been insulted, he’d help me get back at the boys. I knew he had a demon inside him, and I hated that; it terrified me how violent and dangerous he was when he snapped. But in that moment I knew exactly what I had to say to get the monster on my side.

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I told him the story, the names they called me, the way they attacked me. My mother kept laughing it off, telling me to get over it, that it was kids being kids, no big deal. She was trying to defuse the situation, but I couldn’t see that. I was just mad at her. “You think it’s a joke, but it’s not funny! It’s not funny!”

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Abel wasn’t laughing. As I told him what the bullies had done, I could see the anger building up inside him. With Abel’s anger, there was no ranting and raving, no clenched fists. He sat there on the couch listening to me, not saying a word. Then, very calm and deliberate, he stood up.

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“Take me to these boys,” he said.

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Yes, I thought, this is it. Big brother is going to get my revenge for me.

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We got into his car and drove up the road, stopping a few houses down from the tree. It was dark now except for the light from the streetlamps, but we could see the boys were still there, playing under the tree. I pointed to the ringleader. “That one. He was the main one.” Abel slammed his foot on the gas and shot up onto the grass and straight toward the bottom of the tree. He jumped out. I jumped out. As soon as the kids saw me they knew exactly what was happening. They scattered and ran like hell.

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May 31
ERNAIDA O (May 31 2022 1:04PM) : lol the knew what was about to happend
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Abel was quick. Good Lord, he was fast. The ringleader had made a dash for it and was trying to climb over a wall. Abel grabbed him, pulled him down, and dragged him back. Then he stripped a branch off the tree, a switch, and started whipping him. He whipped the shit out of him, and I loved it. I have never enjoyed anything as much as I enjoyed that moment. Revenge truly is sweet. It takes you to a dark place, but, man, it satisfies a thirst.

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May 4
Wesam A (May 04 2022 12:52PM) : revenge can have consequences
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Feb 16
Christian M (Feb 16 2021 9:50AM) : Trevor got revenge on the boys that attacked him with berries through his moms boyfriend Abel.
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Feb 16
Samuel R (Feb 16 2021 10:44AM) : What about Abel? more

Did Abel, his mom’s boyfriend at the time, go too far. What clues do we learn about Abel?

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Feb 17
Christian M (Feb 17 2021 9:22AM) : I learned that Abel can be very aggressive a lot Trevor talked about how he would get mad at cars behind him and constantly have a fight with the person beeping at horn at him.
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Jun 6
ERNAIDA O (Jun 06 2022 1:24PM) : i imagine the relief he felt after that
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Then there was the strangest moment where it flipped. I caught a glimpse of the look of terror in the boy’s face, and I realized that Abel had gone past getting revenge for me. He wasn’t doing this to teach the kid a lesson. He was just beating him. He was a grown man venting his rage on a twelve-year-old boy. In an instant I went from Yes, I got my revenge to No, no, no. Too much. Too much. Oh shit. Oh shit. Oh shit. Dear God, what have I done?

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Dec 17
Nyla B (Dec 17 2020 12:30PM) : Theme of race [Edited] more

Even though he was mixed being both black and white he was stood out mostly as a white boy. The fact he was raised from a black family didn’t changed the fact that his father was white.

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Feb 16
james a (Feb 16 2021 9:53AM) : i would just let him be black
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Feb 17
YNiyah B (Feb 17 2021 8:53AM) : So Basically It Was Like They Were Makin Him Choose?
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Jun 8
AKUMANI S (Jun 08 2022 12:21PM) : He was just beating him. He was a grown man venting
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Oct 19
Jessica H (Oct 19 2020 11:23AM) : Trevor saw the difference between why and how his mother hit him, for discipline and love, and why and how Abel hit the other kid, to satisfy his anger.
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Once this kid was beat to shit, Abel dragged him over to the car and held him up in front of me. “Say you’re sorry.” The kid was whimpering, trembling. He looked me in the eye, and I had never seen fear in someone’s eyes like I saw in his. He’d been beaten by a stranger in a way I don’t think he’d ever been beaten before. He said he was sorry, but it was like his apology wasn’t for what he’d done to me.

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