Donna Ladd

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‘Come On, Katie Mae’: A Mother’s Pride Meets the County Dump

12.30.2018 by Donna Ladd // 2 Comments

My mother’s happiest days were in Florida before I was born where my parents worked in an aluminum-chair factory and went to the beach for fun. After my Daddy (right) decided they had to return to Mississippi, life became very hard for her due to his alcoholism, difficulty keeping a job, his infidelity and his eventual depression.

This is one of the sections I couldn’t fit into my essay in The Guardian about my mother’s illiteracy, poverty and fierce pride:

My mother was sullen as Daddy drove us all to the Neshoba County dump to do something that damaged the fierce pride of a smart woman who had never attended school a day in her life. The sun was dropping low in the sky, suggesting that the scorching Mississippi day might get a little cooler before her dreaded duty ensued.

Mama, with her jet-black hair disheveled, stared out the passenger window of the turquoise Chevrolet. My father and his brothers, all younger, had managed to keep the car running so he could continue his restless jaunts around the dry county, from odd jobs, to illegal beer joints to some bootlegger’s house. He was a hard worker when he worked, but he couldn’t stay in one place long.

Daddy soon turned into the county dump near Dr. Leigh’s dogtrot house where we had lived for a bit and he had broken her arm a few years back. I was in the backseat next to Ma Coates, Mama’s quiet mother with the dark complexion and an always-stern face who, since her own abusive husband had died in 1960, would live for weeks or months with one of her grown kids. She couldn’t read, write, do any math or even dial the telephone. She often landed with my mother, her only daughter, and she and I were buddies, although I talked more. [Read more…]

Categories // Family, Mississippi, Poverty, The South, Whiteness Tags // Family, Mama, Poverty, Shame, Whiteness, Women

It’s Up to White People to Confront Racism, White Supremacy

12.30.2018 by Donna Ladd // Leave a Comment

Bob Fuller, a lifelong Mississippian, (left) is quick to admit he was raised white supremacist. He is pictured here with Robert Brown, a Mississippi barber and activist against racism and the Confederate flag, after a dialogue about structural racism for The Guardian. Photo by Delreco Harris

Fact: White people in America, and beyond, are raised in white-supremacist cultures. Some are lucky enough to grow up in households fighting that socialization and become part of the solution. But many are not. Many of us have to, first, acknowledge the racist machinations of our families, childhoods and communities—and then we have to do the hard work to change it and to understand the full breadth of racism, far beyond interpersonal reactions. Being well-meaning simply isn’t enough; being arrogant enough to think you’re above it—looking at many of you progressives here—is especially unacceptable.

When my Guardian editor, the wonderful Jessica Reed, read my final draft of my profile of Benny Ivey, a former white-gang leader in Mississippi who decided after two decades in prison to change his life, she was struck that he had taken his Confederate flag down by the time our (black) photographer visited so he wouldn’t hurt him. She then asked me to interview Mississippians who still like the Confederate flag, which I did, also factchecking their reasons. After that piece published, a black Mississippi friend told me I should interview white Mississippians who had changed their views. Jess immediately gave me the go-ahead, understanding that while we need to interrogate the reasoning behind Confederacy fandom, we also need to spotlight people who have confronted the racism they were taught, which I did here for The Guardian.

It might surprise people to know that it took me less than 24 hours to find multiple white people who were ready to talk to me about their journey from what I call their “racial miseducation”—often through revisionist “lost cause”-filled textbooks—and/or oblivious upbringings, in one way or another. I grew up in Mississippi, and after I returned from exile 17 years ago, I started a newspaper that has explored racism in its various forms deeply here, building trust and a wide and diverse network of people that, frankly, national media often do not know exist or how to talk to. They end up missing from the national narrative.

[Read more…]

Categories // Confederate Flag, Lost Cause, Mississippi, Race, Textbooks, The South, Whiteness Tags // Confederate Flag, Mississippi, Race, Whiteness

Donna Ladd

I’m Donna Ladd, a writer, journalist and editor from Philadelphia, Mississippi. I write about racism/whiteness, poverty, gender, violence and the criminal-justice system. I regularly contribute long-form features and essays to The Guardian, and I’m the editor-in-chief of the Jackson Free Press, which I co-founded in 2002 after returning to my home state after 18 years in exile. I also write occasional columns for NBC News Think.

I am currently a Logan non-fiction fellow with an upcoming writing residency at the Carey Institute in upstate New York in March and April 2018 to work on a book about race in Mississippi.

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