
In 1961, a white journalist darkened his skin to experience Jim Crow's brutal reality. "Black Like Me" shocked America, selling 10 million copies despite death threats forcing Griffin to flee to Mexico. This dangerous experiment validated what Black voices had been saying all along.
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In 1959, John Howard Griffin embarked on what many considered a dangerous, even suicidal mission: to chemically darken his skin and travel through the segregated South as a Black man. What drove this white novelist, musicologist, and former French Resistance fighter to undertake such a radical transformation? The communication between races had broken down completely - Southern Black Americans wouldn't tell whites the truth about their conditions, having learned that honesty made life miserable. Griffin's burning question was simple yet profound: What is discrimination based on skin color truly like? Despite being considered a specialist in race issues, he realized how little he actually knew about the Black experience in America. The physical transformation was grueling. A dermatologist prescribed medication normally used for vitiligo patients, combined with ultraviolet treatments that left Griffin constantly nauseated while doctors monitored potential liver damage. After days of treatment and shaving his head, Griffin first confronted his new reflection - a fierce, bald, very dark-skinned stranger staring back from the mirror. "I became two men," he wrote, "the observing one and the one who panicked." That night, stepping into darkness as a Black man, Griffin experienced his first taste of what would become a profound journey across America's racial divide - one that would ultimately sell over 10 million copies worldwide and remain required reading decades later.
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco
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Cree par des anciens de Columbia University a San Francisco

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