Excerpt from "They Sent Us This White Girl" by Elaine DeLott Baker in _Deep in Our Hearts: Nine White Women in the Freedom Movement_
The notion of "the other" has cast long shadows over my life. One morning, when I was about nine or ten, I was sitting at the kitchen table with my mother and my father's mother. Grandma Alice spoke only Yiddish and could not read or write English. Mama was reading aloud from a newspaper account of a plane crash the night before, shaking her head with sadness at the loss of life. "Any Jews killed?" Grandma Alice asked. This was the familiar refrain: "Any Jews?" If there were no Jews, it was a non-event, something of no concern. I was confused. It made no sense to me that a segment of humanity would be excluded from concern because they were not part of our membership group. It was my first awareness of culture as a system of belonging, of insiders and outsiders. Rights Owner: University of Georgia Press Elaine DeLott Baker, Deep in Our Hearts: Nine White Women in the Freedom Movement (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2000)

Suggested Discussion Questions:

For discussion questions and related lesson plan, see http://jwa.org/teach/livingthelegacy/civilrights/how-does-my-identity-inform-my-actions

Time Period: Modern (Spinoza through post-WWII)