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CIVIL RIGHTS ICON RUBY BRIDGES VISITS WHITE HOUSE AND TALKS ABOUT FAMOUS PAINTING OF HER FIRST DAY AT SCHOOL

Richard Kigel · Friday, July 22nd 2011 at 10:04AM · 1827 views
HUFFINGTON POST, July 21, 2011--The White House's recent addition of a Norman Rockwell painting has prompted a serious discussion of civil rights. Rockwell's 1963 painting, "The Problem We All Live With," shows a young girl on her way to first grade after the school board mandated the desegregation of two New Orleans schools in 1960.

To commemorate the piece, President Obama received a visit from Ruby Bridges, the student depicted in the painting. At six years old, Bridges was escorted by Federal Marshals to William Frantz Public School as its first African American student, thereby signaling the beginning of the integration of the local public school system.

President Obama took time out of his day to meet with Bridges and representatives of the Normal Rockwell Museum in order to discuss the painting, which has become an icon in the civil rights era.

She described the experience to ABC News: “Driving up I could see the crowd, but living in New Orleans, I actually thought it was Mardi Gras. There was a large crowd of people outside of the school. They were throwing things and shouting, and that sort of goes on in New Orleans at Mardi Gras."

“The girl in the painting, at six years old, knew absolutely nothing about racism,” she told the President. “But the lesson that I took away that year, in an empty school building, was that none of us know anything about disliking one another when we come into the world. It is something that is passed on to us.”

Ms. Bridges shared her powerful insight into the meaning of her experience. “I learned a very valuable lesson and that is that we should never look at a person and judge them by the color of their skin.”

The painting will be on display in the West Wing of the White House outside of the Oval Office until October 31st. Another Rockwell painting depicting the Statue of Liberty donated to the White House by Steven Spielberg in 1994 hangs in the same room.

Watch Ruby Bridges visit with President Obama and discuss the painting.

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Richard Kigel Staten Island, NY

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Comments (2)

Richard Kigel Friday, July 22nd 2011 at 10:05AM

“I learned a very valuable lesson and that is that we should never look at a person and judge them by the color of their skin.”
--RUBY BRIDGES

Richard Kigel Saturday, July 23rd 2011 at 7:38PM

Thanks, Carmen.

I had the great privildge of seeing the original painting in Norman Rockwells studio in Stockbridge, Mass. It is a stunning piece of art.

He did another painting, which was never finished, depicting the murder of the three civil Rights workers in Mississippi, Cheney, Werner and Goodman. It was a haunting image.

That era is long past now--thank God. We still have lots of work to do before we can really say that we can all live as brothers. But at least, nobody will every have to go through what Ruby Bridges went through just to go to school .

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