Saturday,_ September 34, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Saturday, September 30, I 972 PHE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five Further adventures of the Great White Father LAND OF THE FOUR DIREC- TIONS, by Frederick J. Pratson. Chatham Press, distributed by Viking Press, $3.95, paperback. DOWN HOME: C A M D E N. ALABAMA, by Bob Adelman, with text edited by Susan Hall. McGraw-Hill, $16.95. By ED SUROVELL Daily Books Editor Land of the Four Directions is a photographic essay of .the In- dians of the Maine-New Bruns- wick border, and Down Home is a similar treatment of pover- ty-ridden Wilcox County, Ala- bama. Each, in its own way, is a moving statement of the trag- edy which humans inflict upon other humans and upon them- selves. By now neither tale is, in and of itself, particularly new or re- vealing. Photographers have been concerned with the mystique and the poverty of the South and with the awesome grandure of the American Indian and of the horror brought upon him by the white man ever since the camera was invented, and in many ways the photographer has been more concerned and in advance of his time than have the rest of us. Yet each new book to appear adds its own little bit of infor- mation, its own perspective to the way we live. Down Home is a portrait of a poor area in the heart of Ala- bama's Black Belt. (I've always suspected that the phrase "Black Belt" was conjured up by some Yankee who found it unbelieve- able that there should be a place in the U.S.A. where there were more blacks than whites; I won- der if it would have ever occur- red to a resident, black or white, of one of these areas that it made any difference what the population balance was. Where is the White Belt?) "There's (I code of behavior between white (i niggers. It's not (I set of rules you jOt downa I teach your children. Wf e don't know how to keep the code., but wce do knoici when ice viOl(lte it." The demography of Wilcox County, racially speaking, is fas- cinating. In 1860 there were 5,517 whites and 11,835 blacks (all of whom were slaves; there were no free blacks). By 1900 there were 6,779 whites and 28,652 non- whites! And by 1970 the white population had shrunk to 5,117 while the nonwhite had also slid back to 11,123. But image the situation in 1900. Either (1) the white population had barely man- aged to maintain itself, while the black had proliferated, or (2) most of the whites had got- ten out whenever the chance presented itself, while the blacks, either having no choice or actu- ally liking their life, stayed, or (3) everybody intermarried, pro- ducing by the American way of counting heads a largely "non- white" population. The heritage of this situation is profound. Wilcox County and its county seat, Camden, are places we ought to get to know better, something which Down Home goes 'a long way toward doing. The white tenant farmers, the black sharecroppers, the sheriff, the proprietor of a country store, the proud old women living in antebellum mansions, the middle- class family in a ranchhouse, the young men who went North to college and came back, the littie girl who was the only black child in a third grade class-they are all impressively recorded photo- graphically and in the text through their own words. In the pages of this 'ook the whites, predictably, are usually always bigoted; the blacks are jiust as predictably pleasant, warm, and tolerant. "If you have business with anyone in Cam- den, you sit under the pecan tree. Sooner or later everyone in town goes by . . . There's not a bit of gossip that doesn't pass through as evidence. Under the tree men think they're smart. They talk about foreign affairs like they got a Ph.D. from Harvard. Wo- men aren't allowed and the col- ored have a bench around the corner." And so goes life. The Indians of Frederick Prat- son's Land of the Four Direc- tions live in a different world. Unlike whites and blacks in the South, whites and Indians don't live in the same society, and the Indian has-fortbettertorbfor worse - two things the black doesn't, territoriality and a spe- cial legal status. The Indians of the Northeast, unlike the Plains Indians, have had to live with the white man from the begin- ning, and consequently in years their burden has been that much greater. Their population decim- ated, their culture exposed to white culture for an unbearably long time, virtually forgotten be- cause of their lack of visibility in numbers, they struggle on in "I've beets married to Tinee for fifty-six years. She's my boss. But there's one thing that troubles me-that I didn't re-raise her and whop her. If I'd whopped her a little, she would have been a "The white people done done the colored people in all kinds of ways. They wants you where you say 'Yes ma'am' and 'No ma'am,' 'Yes sir' and 'No sir.' If you don't do it, they look at you real hard." sreeter t!ife." spite of poor organization, and prejudice. The message of this book is in one way clear: the Indian has a life and a culture that the white is trying tomdestroy. But what does this mean for the white r e a d e r? "The anthropologists come into the communities," says the author, "asking the tribal councils for permission to study the People in order to earn an advanced degree or write a book. They are sincere scholars in their quest to further knowl- edge. The People are generous in the giving of their time and their memories. Sometimes the attention is flattering and can kill the boredom for a few hours, but often they feel like living curiosi- ties in a woodland extension of a university museum." I once sat in on a seminar on the reservation Indian, and after a particularly frustrating discus- sion of the Indian's existence someone asked, "But what can we do?" The instructor said, "They need lawyers." Not an- thropologists, and maybe not pic- ture books either, no matter how well done. oo ks booksboo k books books boo ksbooks books.b Free schools and self-indulgence All of today's photographs are by Bob from his book reviewed today, DOWN Adelman HOME. FREE SCHOOLS, by Jonathan " Kozol. Houghton Mifflin, $5.95. NO PARTICULAR PLACE TO GO: THE MAKING OF A FREE SCHOOL, by Steve Bhaerman and Joel Denker. Simon and Schuster, $6.95. By DENNIS ACKERMAN, ROGER LEWIN and JERRY SHAPIRO Jonathan Kozol has written a political essay and primer on what he considers to be free schools. If you are interested in working -(1) outside public edu- cation, (2) outside the white man's counter - culture, (3) in- side the cities, (4) with the poor, the black, and the dispossessed, (5) in the smallest possible group; and if you are interested in understanding some of the legalities and finances of small schools, then Free Schools could be very useful, At least fifty per cent of the book is devoted to the legal and financial aspects of free schools, and the author includes as an apppendix a list of the best source materials in those areas. The other half of the book at- tempts to attribute a clear ethi- cal priority to the confrontations of the misery of the ghetto. The harassment by the public insti- tutions and by the wealthy, the higher mortality rates and the fight for physical survival are all emotionally described. Of the dynamics of human relations, the complexities . of learning and teaching, the fragility of hopes and the persistence of needs, Kozol has very little to say. He makes an easy case against so- cial injustices but is repeatedly vague in providing images to de- scribe what action, in fact, can be initiated by any sizable group in this country. When speaking of black libera- tion and self-determination in public education, Kozol states that "there cannot be much ser- ious role for white men and white women in the genesis of these operations." Why is gene- sis so different in these small counter-culture schools in black neighborhoods? How does Mr. Kozol explain, his role? What action can be taken to let blacks help themselves? Why doesn't Mr. Kozol help the blacks to write about the free school ex- perience? low many small schools will, or can, the cities support realistically in the next few years? These are some of the questions left unanswered. Basically, the author refuses to become entangled in the real complexities t h a t all small schools must face. For example, it seems inadequate to advocate strident political doctrines as a response to building inspectors; in some cities, like ours, they have turned out to be helpful al- lies. Theory and procedure de- rived from angry slogans can be disservices in many instances. There are many contradic- tions in the author's style that confuse us. He states that pub- licity should be avoided. Yet on page after page he blasts city officials and landlords by name. If those people seek revenge in Boston, it will not be Mr. Kozol whose survival is in danger; but the people he is helping. He also maintains that viable situations are the small and personal ones. Yet he writes books for the masses and converses with many free schools in the country prolific letter writing. He states through one - night stands and that his approach will raise money for the poor, but what if these schools become fashion-. able in the future? Are gifts from Jonathan Kozol and the Ford Foundation the key to eco- dox encountered is the possibili- ty that Free Schools may be- come a hindrance politically, so- cially, and intellectually to the very people Jonathan Kozol is addressing. Joel Denker and Steve Bhaer- man's autobiographical confes- sion is unsatisfactory and unbe- lievable. A good 'portion of No Particular Place to Go concerns itself with the interactions of a learning commune which the au- thors began in 1969 and left in 1971. They point out some of the problems encountered while run- ning their commune; how they mention the difficulties of at- tendance, of continuity of learn- ing, of group learning versus in- dividual learning, etc. They do not, however, reveal how to initiate positive processes to deal with the problems of a day school or a commune. Many of the descriptions of their experience only serve to confuse the reader or to place in doubt the authors' credibility. One example is Joel Denker's description of, how the school very righteously removed "a cancer" from its midst by adher- ing to the beauty of love and other related emotions, instead of allowing the school to become involved in the dangers of psy- chology, extended dialogue, and reason. The cancer, Arthur, called a meeting, invited a friend who was a psychologist, and drew up an ultimatium concerning his continued participation in the community. Arthur was having trouble coping with the group's lack of responsibility (cleaning, etc.). Denker was outraged by these actions and refused to at- tend the meeting. He then wrote his own paper (ultimatum?) which declared ultimatums to be unethical. Arthur backed down a little and sent the psychologist home. At the next meeting. Joel xiety. Denker's procedures are certainly striking, but we believe, perhaps naively, that adolescents should be helped to move in the direction of adult and/or rational behavior, rather than infantile and or irrational behavior. Den- ker seems excellent at exacer- bating the frenzy of adolescence. The students he used for his own needs were never given the chance in his presence to slow down. Therefore, he could not help them to reflect on what they considered fantasy and reality in order to establish their own pace and style. When he decided to abandon the school, he left in a hurry. If there was a school or any person depending on him, his behavior certainly revealed how much he cared. One reason we are being so severe with Joel Denker is because he has written a book about free schools after demonstrating that he did not understand or care enough to "make" a viable free school. We felt much more sympathy for Steve Bhaerman's plight. He seems to have been far more honestly uncomfortable with him- self, the myriad problems of those around him, and the com- plexities inherent in the forms of seduction that he observed. He admitted to being an adolescent among adolescents. We have the impression that his work has changed him. He seems to have left it, not because he was de- nied illicit satisfactions, but be- cause a certain nausea and self- knowledge moved him to seek out the next step. It is possible that a different community with more mature people might have provided Steve with the possi- bility of remaining and growing. To those who know very little about free schools, we should say directly that we consider the book to be more deception than expo- : :::l z