I was once in a group where we were asked to identify a book that had made a significant difference in our lives. When I mentioned Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, one person in the group laughed. I assumed then, and still do, that the person had never read the book nor understood its importance to a generation of people born and raised in a region where racism was common.
The book was published 50 years ago—July 11, 1960—and has never gone out of print. Lee won a Pulitzer Prize and the book became an Academy Award-winning film, but she never wrote another book. Even so, the story of young Scout Finch and her father, Atticus, has helped many to reconsider racism both then and now.
I read the book as a college freshman attending a segregated university in the South. I did four years of college on a campus where the only African-Americans were custodians and service personnel. It was a time of racial unrest and outright conflict. As a young Christian who was struggling with how to reconcile what I had lived with what I was learning from my study of scripture and discussion with friends, the story of white people who were willing to take a stand in opposition to community standards was a revelation. I came to understand that discrimination based on the color of one’s skin was wrong in a court of law or in society at large.
Lee captured both the prejudice of a culture and the fearlessness of Atticus Finch, a small town lawyer who was willing to defend a black man unjustly accused of rape. Through the eyes of a child, she cut through the extraneous and unimportant to the heart of the matter—there are times when a person must take a stand for the right.
The lesson is never over, of course. It is one that we need to reconsider as individuals and as a society on a regular basis. Prejudice always raises its ugly head, especially in times of stress or crisis, and must be exposed for what it is again and again.
Thank you, Harper Lee, for helping us to deal with our demons and find new ways to love others. We still need the help.
The book was published 50 years ago—July 11, 1960—and has never gone out of print. Lee won a Pulitzer Prize and the book became an Academy Award-winning film, but she never wrote another book. Even so, the story of young Scout Finch and her father, Atticus, has helped many to reconsider racism both then and now.
I read the book as a college freshman attending a segregated university in the South. I did four years of college on a campus where the only African-Americans were custodians and service personnel. It was a time of racial unrest and outright conflict. As a young Christian who was struggling with how to reconcile what I had lived with what I was learning from my study of scripture and discussion with friends, the story of white people who were willing to take a stand in opposition to community standards was a revelation. I came to understand that discrimination based on the color of one’s skin was wrong in a court of law or in society at large.
Lee captured both the prejudice of a culture and the fearlessness of Atticus Finch, a small town lawyer who was willing to defend a black man unjustly accused of rape. Through the eyes of a child, she cut through the extraneous and unimportant to the heart of the matter—there are times when a person must take a stand for the right.
The lesson is never over, of course. It is one that we need to reconsider as individuals and as a society on a regular basis. Prejudice always raises its ugly head, especially in times of stress or crisis, and must be exposed for what it is again and again.
Thank you, Harper Lee, for helping us to deal with our demons and find new ways to love others. We still need the help.
Comments
Is that name from Arkansas. If it is or even if it ain't you must see Winter's Bone from Debra Granik.
Great theology of AND in her interview in recent cover stoy of FilmMagazine.
But Atticus Finch. Good work.
You may want to google and later blog about Malcolm Gladwell's shortsighted dissent in the NewYorker.
He missed the point
Oh, you must google Bonhoeffer in Alabama and click on the link to Charles Marsh lecture in Berlin of March this year; sublime.