Bringing Down the Hope: Condoleezza Rice, Black Capitalism and War
By Max Gordon
December 13, 2004
I
Having grown up in Birmingham, Alabama as the daughter of a Presbyterian pastor, it is not inconceivable that Condoleezza Rice kicked the underside of a church pew with patent-leather shoes, that she was shushed during a lengthy service with a peppermint from her mother’s purse; or worse, an arched eyebrow silenced her and a girlfriend’s giggles with the promise of a beating after church. Mrs. Rice may have stayed up late ironing Condoleezza’s Sunday dress or pressing her hair by the stove, finally styling it with red ribbons the next morning. Pastor Rice might have carefully mouthed the words from the front pew as Condi remembered all her lines in the Christmas pageant. As a young girl growing up in Birmingham, Condoleezza Rice, at least once in her life, must have hesitated before two drinking fountains; finally approaching the one with the sign marked “Colored Only”.
To read the rest of this article go to
http://bringingdownhope.blogspot.com