Dear Orange County: My Contribution to an Orange County Register Column
Briefly in late 2020 the Orange County Register invited contributions for an occasional column entitled "Dear Orange County" about the social changes at work in the county. That column went dormant, unfortunately, after two installments were published. One was "Black in the OC Bubble" by Gladys Kamara and the other was "Inequity is About More than Race" by Charles T. Kelly. Below is what I contributed:
Dear Orange County,
Take a good look around, this is my hometown, a
mid-century-modern suburb in Anaheim, and like the dying steel town Bruce
Springsteen sings about, much of its history is slipping away, and cannot be
returned or replaced. I’ve watched large chunks of Anaheim’s history vanish
while others, like the trees that still shade my old Loara High School, are
neglected.
My neighborhood’s homes and streets have histories, too. Once
geographic reminders of history are gone, they’re gone. What I have left is
photographs and memories, and those photos and memories that comprise a life
can prove important in unexpected ways. Maybe in those personal individual
histories is where people keep how they relate to others.
I’ve witnessed Orange County’s transformation from a largely
rural backwater of a county, when it had a national reputation for extremely
conservative views. For many decades “Orange County” was an automatic punch
line, a handy label for America’s most extreme right-wing fringe. Since the
1960s we’ve witnessed a transformation to a sprawling metropolis, wealthier,
more cosmopolitan, better educated, with (sometimes) more moderate politics.
Except sometimes ”new” Orange County still acts like old “Orange County” as
when the board of education recently chose to act like this new-fangled
COVID-19 would change nothing.
When I was about two years old, my parents moved into a
then-new mid-century modern housing development, within walking distance of
Disneyland, one of so many suburbs built during the housing boom of the 1960s that
drove Orange County’s transformation.
A block south of Disneyland was Katella Elementary School, amid
a strip of tourist motels, and the rest of the neighborhood was dominated by
orange groves, strawberry farms, irrigation ditches, and lots vacant but for
tumbleweeds.
Stoddard Elementary School with its surrounding park often
defines my suburb today, but my school days began when orange groves stood
where Stoddard now stands. I attended Katella Elementary until third grade.
Then someone labelled me “gifted” and a decision was made I should receive a
“special” education for the “gifted.” For five years I was bused to Eldorado
Private School in Orange. I was “bused” but it had nothing to do with race. I
received a “special” education but for the gifted, not the developmentally
disabled.
Eldorado was progressive and experimental, completely
different from the public school experience the other kids in my neighborhood
received. I learned algebra and Latin in eighth grade but was mercifully never
graded on either, because on those subjects I performed below my grade level.
Reading and writing, on the other hand, I performed far above my grade level.
My parents taught me the simple fact that people, no matter
what skin color or religion or sexual identity, are people. My parents were
liberal Democrats in a sea of Goldwater stickers. They questioned Christianity
and all religion, in a county where revival meetings were common, prayer and
the Bible in schools was a battleground, and the reaction to John Kennedy’s
assassination included some saying prayers of thanks. They opposed segregation
in a county with a history of segregating not just the Black, but the Brown.
I was too young to understand much political or social
significance, but Eldorado tolerated children with rebellious views. Pre-teen
boys wore long hair, pre-teen girls wore flared pants, everyone wore peace
signs, and every day brought anti-establishment and anti-war talk. Acceptance
was offered two Black students and one Afro-wearing teacher—but not me. For five
years I endured daily bullying, just because. The kids that were so into peace
and love didn’t extend it to me. That was long before any anti-bullying
programs were developed anywhere.
My final four grades were spent back in Anaheim public schools,
where the student body included Asian-Americans and Spanish surnames, but only
one Black--and he was an African exchange student. I remember no Hispanic or
Black staff or faculty, and only one Asian. I spent those years putting up with
more bullying and with some teachers making terrible statements and “jokes”
about women, gays, and American Indians, and encouraging students to behave
similarly.
When I came to a gym teacher complaining another girl hit
me, the teacher’s response was, “Are you going to fight her after school?”
Welcome to anti-bullying measures at Loara High.
Such attitudes have continued to prevail in my adult life. I’ll
give but one example here. If I mention my father expressed sympathy for
American Indians, I too often get, “Was your father Indian?” I look about as
Indian as Ivanka Trump. I’m not sure which is more appalling, that the person’s
so clueless about what being an Indian means, or the person’s “reasoning” is
that if you’re sympathetic to Indians you must be one. That’s not something, “Say
Native American, not American Indian,” can fix.
Such reactions smack of Donald Trump’s reported, “I don’t
get it. What’s in it for them?” regarding the war dead and military veterans.
The person’s thinking is limited to, “me.”
History of a community can be about the physical,
geographical, and economic changes, but you can’t bulldoze thinking the way you
can bulldoze orange groves or downtowns. I’ve seen some deliberate destruction of
my community’s history, but I’ve seen some historic preservation, too. The
extreme far-right views that Orange County was once synonymous with are part of
its past, but as William Faulkner once said, the past isn’t dead, it’s not even
past. Witness a recent KKK rally in Pearson Park, and the wide support Donald
Trump enjoys right in my neighborhood. We’ve reached a place where we
understand the need for anti-bullying measures. Maybe similar measures can be
used to send far-right intolerance the way of Orange County’s bulldozed orange
groves.
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