Page 4 June 7, 2000 In Print Soul Sister By Grace Halsell Crossroads International; 1999 Grace Halsell, the white woman who left her White House job as speech writer and darkened her skin to live in segregated Mississippi, looks back on her experiences in a 30,h anniversary edition o f her best-selling book. Soul Sister, released in November, 1999, by Crossroads International. “If today I returned to re-live my Soul Sister experiences, it’s not likely I would be arrested, as I was back in the late 1960s for stepping from a segregated black section o f a bus station into a more commodious white section to use a telephone. Indeed, the wooden walls segregating blacks have been removed. In some ways, she concludes, “conditions have changed for the worse - we know there are more black men imprisoned, for instance. We have more prisoners, per capita, behind bars than any country o f the world. And a large percentage are men of color. Yet, based largely on the changes that resulted from the struggles o f the 1960s, African-Americans have made significant economic and political progress in the past 30 years.” Still, she insists, the United States remains largely a divided nation, still without equal rights for those of color. And with mushrooming “hate” movements. “The Ku Klux Kian no longer operates with impunity, but we have a new generation o f w hite supremacists fostering racial hatred and using affirmative action as their main target.” Halsell points out that when her former boss, President Johnson, first defined affirmative action, “he made no reference to racial preferences or quotas. He defined affirmative action as creating a level playing field, providing minorities with an equal opportunity in education and employment. The enemies o f civil rights have today organized a nationwide effort against affirmative action, that they have redefined to mean racial preferences and quotas.” She concludes by observing that while much has changed politically and economically for blacks, “not much has advanced in social terms o f integration. The tragedy and severity o f our racial problems remain.” Focus ^.lovflanb (Jfiieeruvr s- Malinche’s Conquest By Anna Lanyon Allen & Unwin; 1999 Book R eview by Thiemeyer Jay chapter devoted to m ythologies explains links to the goddess ‘Woman S erpent’, a potent force in pre- Spanish Mexico. Indeed, the folklore and legend - there is a volcano named for her, a river, ritualized seasonal dance practiced in myriad versions throughout the countryside offer up a h ig h ly sy m p a th e tic , n e a rly archetypal figure. Nobel laureate, Octavio Paz’s most famous work was an essay on ‘The Sons o f M alinche’, whose point is similar to L an y o n ’s ow n. Ws the sim ple, courageous Myan girl, sold into slavery, thrown back for survival on her own wits, whose words literally unlocked the door to a new world, a traitor or was she a monumental victim o f history which sacrifies whom it wishes and “constructs the heroes and villains we need” - more specifically, history according to those in power at this point in time. In Mexico a ‘malinchista’ is a traitor, the lowest o f the low. The original Malinche was the Mayan interpreter or go-between for Heman Cortes, whose conquest o f Mexico inspired the new category ‘C onquistador’. Cortes was a no-nonsense adventurer (and womanizer, etc. - brutal, not to be denied) but without Malinche, the simple aboriginal woman o f amazing c o u ra g e , p re se n c e o f m ind and fortitude, Cortes would never have gained entry to the Court o f Moctezuma and with it the heart o f the Aztec Empire. He would have been a reckless, fearless scout for the Spanish throne forever lost to history. M ALINCHE’S CONQUEST is as much a travelogue as history. A solution to M alinche’s mystery can hardly be expected. The event ofher life, that o f a M ayan girl abandoned to slavery, took place five hundred years ago. T h e re is p re c io u s little e v id e n c e o f any k in d , m uch less concrete verifiable d e ta ils. C o rte s mentioned her by name only once in h is n u m ero u s dispatches across the A tlantic. But w ith these scarce ST resources, Lanyon writes an involving, s o m e tim e s mesmerizing story. M a lin c h e , the w o m a n ,is m ost fa sc in a tin g as nationalist symbol and as myth, a link with the ‘cosm ic’ Mexican past. She was made a symbol o f b e tra y a l by Mexican nationalist politicians. But she is only seen that way by those in power - the well-to-do and Spend $ 2 5 d o lla r s a n d g e t $3 o ff y o u r p u r c h a s e . powerful in Mexico C ity. Am ong the F r e e d e liv e r y w i t h p u r c h a s e o f $ 2 5 d o l l a r s o r m o re. m ass o f M exican folks, especial ly the rural poor for whom M exico C ity is another world, the m y stiq u e of M alinche is large and persuasive. A W E R E O PE N LAQUISHA’S BEAUTY SUPPLY 309 N.E. WYGANT P hon e: (503)249-7329 „ A n th o n y H u f f O w n e r : Tiajua/ a H uff M a n a g e r : Q i a n n a E n g li s H jfm i_ P a g e r : 7 3 1 -0 8 5 9 1 É Ì