Quotes about Race
I hope and trust to meet you in Heaven, both white and black-both white and black.
— Andrew Jackson
Freemasonry is founded on the immutable laws of Truth and Justice and its grand object is to promote the happiness of the human race.
— George Washington
The Black female is assaulted in her tender years by all those common forces of nature at the same time that she is caught in the tripartite crossfire of masculine prejudice, white illogical hate and Black lack of power. The fact that the adult American Negro female emerges a formidable character is often met with amazement, distaste and even belligerence. It is seldom accepted as an inevitable outcome of the struggle won by survivors and deserves respect if not enthusiastic acceptance.
— Maya Angelou
Her husband remains, in my memory, undefined. I lumped him with all the other white men that I had ever seen and tried not to see.
— Maya Angelou
During these years in Stamps, I met and fell in love with William Shakespeare. He was my first white love.
— Maya Angelou
Whether we were in the mines of South Africa, or the liberal New York theater, nothing changed. Whites wanted everything. They thought they deserved everything. That they wanted to possess all the materials of the earth was in itself disturbing, but that they also wanted to control the souls and the pride of people was inexplicable.
— Maya Angelou
Did he insult you? I mean us, the race? Not directly. Like most white racists, he was paternalistic. I would have preferred he slap me than that he talk down upon me. Then I could retaliate in kind.
— Maya Angelou
For centuries we had probed their faces, the angles of their bodies, the sounds of their voices and even their odors. Often our survival had depended upon the accurate reading of a white man's chuckle or the disdainful wave of a white woman's hand. Whites, on the other hand, always knew that no serious penalty threatened them if they misunderstood blacks. Whites were safely isolated from our concerns.
— Maya Angelou
In that second I was wounded. My mind struck a truth as an elbow can strike a table edge. A poor, uneducated servant in Africa was so secure he could ignore established White rudeness. No Black American I had ever known knew that security. Our tenure in the United States, though long and very hard-earned, was always so shaky, we had developed patience as a defense, but never as aggression.
— Maya Angelou
I think that everyone thought that the Depression like everything else, was for the white-folks, so it had nothing to do with them.
— Maya Angelou
You say … "We will ride on fast horses"— but those who pursue you will be faster. Isaiah 30:16
— Beth Moore
I want to finish my race in the Promised Land, not in the wilderness. You too? Then we have to cash in our fear and complacency and spend all we have on the only ticket out: BELIEF. Faith is the only thing that will ever close the gap between our theology and our reality.
— Beth Moore