Last night we happened across a film from 1961, Paris Blues. Sidney Poitier and Paul Newman were jazz musicians living in Paris, and Diahann Carroll and Joan Woodward played American women on vacation together. Race played a significant role, as the couples fell in love and the men each had to decide whether or not to return to the U.S. to live. Poitier talked about how easy his life was in France, and how hard it was to be Black at home.
Sixty years later, Dempsey felt that in Paris. Everywhere we looked, we saw couples and groups of friends walking and talking naturally and spontaneously. We saw pairs of men gesturing in deep conversation, groups of moms pushing strollers shopping together. And for all we’d heard of ethnic discord between Muslims and non-Muslims, women in headscarves and their partners sat at outdoor cafes alongside ethnically French friends. It felt so easy for us, too.
Diahann Carroll’s character said that things had changed a lot in the five years Poitier’s character had been gone, and things would change every year if people worked together to make it happen. Certainly great change has happened here, in terms of Black people gaining equity in most areas of life. But despite the progress of these sixty years, two weeks in Paris showed us we are far from a truly integrated society.
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