It's heartening and historically significant that the "official"
family of Strom Thurmond this week readily acknowledged and accepted
Essie Mae Washington-Williams, 78, of Los Angeles, as a member of
their family. Only a few days after Williams publicly announced that
she is the mixed-race daughter of the late senator and governor,
Strom Thurmond Jr. welcomed her to the family, noting, "I feel good,
because that's a feeling you get from doing the right thing."
Thurmond Jr.'s generous acknowledgment effectively breaks
generations of tradition regarding the mixed race offspring of
prominent Southern men. Their white sons and daughters typically
grew up under the umbrella of privilege, carrying on the family name
when their parents died. Their mixed-race children, meanwhile, grew
up in the shadows and went unacknowledged after the patriarch's
death, while white brothers and sisters often pretended they didn't
exist.
The speed with which the Thurmonds recognized Williams' claim to
her family heritage marks, we hope, a new, more honest era, not only
in the South but also nationwide. Americans, Southern and
Northern, must move past the notion that biracial children somehow
are misbegotten and therefore deserve a lifetime of shame and
inferior status. This is one of the many unjust myths with which
racism has been perpetuated.
Children are children regardless of parentage, and each one
deserves recognition as a member in good standing of his or her
family, no matter who the forebears may be. With their generosity
toward Williams, the Thurmonds have given that agenda the legitimacy
and urgency it
deserves.