l****z 发帖数: 29846 | 1 【 以下文字转载自 USANews 讨论区 】
发信人: cmvmei (cmvmei), 信区: USANews
标 题: Re: Donald Trump开始攻击亚裔了
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Tue Sep 1 21:46:16 2015, 美东)
記得看過一個故事,一個臺灣留學生1960年代到美國南部某地讀大學,要去洗手間,她
看了看兩邊的牌子,出於中國人的謙虛,就準備走向colored那間。
結果一個白人老太太衝過來,跟她說她去錯了,讓她一定要去用white的洗手間。
網上也能找到一些人的回憶:
Zou Taofen, a Chinese journalist and Communist, traveled around the US
meeting with other leftists and even visited Alabama in 1935. During his
time in the South, it appears that Zou was deeply affected by the oppression
of Blacks under segregation, from which it appears he was largely exempt.
Zou, for example, was instructed by white friends to sit in white-only areas
(such as on the bus), and that he "must by no means stray onto the colored
side." It seems that in Zou's case, at least, he was considered part of the
"whites" in the segregated South. This is just one person's experience but I
hope it helps.
Source: Land Without Ghosts: Chinese Impressions of America from the Mid-
Nineteenth Century to the Present by R. David Arkush and Leo O. Lee.
Dan Klein, They missed me when thinking was being packed away in boxes.
1.2k Views
When I was a child living in the South, Asians were very rare. They would
have been treated as white. South Asians were extremely rare, maybe
nonexistent, but they might have had problems, unless it was clear from
their clothing that they were foreigners. Then they would have been treated
with courtesy.The racist situation varied by sub region too. It was more
moderate in the places I knew.
Written 19 Jun, 2014
Downvote
Comments1+
Share |
|