Horizons can be broadened in Newport Beach
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Some weeks ago, in the aftermath of the long public City Council
session of recrimination and support of Newport Beach City Councilman
Dick Nichols, I wrote in this space that the most rational and
intelligent comments on that emotionally charged night were made by
an African American man who concluded: “This is not a healthy place
for me. I don’t feel comfortable living in Newport Beach, but I’m not
leaving.”
I suggested that it would be instructive for our City Council
members to know why he found Newport Beach unhealthy, and offered to
help in that effort by asking him to call me when the city clerk
didn’t have his name. That call -- along with several others from
people who know him -- came promptly, and I would like here to
introduce him to the Newport Beach City Council.
His name is Jess Craig, and he is vice president for student
services at Orange Coast College. He and his wife, Maddy -- who is on
the English faculty at Irvine Valley College -- have lived in Newport
Coast for the past two years. He has a master’s in human relations
from the University of Oklahoma, and has served in college
administration in Los Angeles and Orange County for the past 30
years.
“I felt the council took a courageous stand on the Nichols’ issue
and said so,” Craig told me. “It was also heartening to me to see the
compassion that was expressed. But I was appalled to hear the venom
and racial hostility that came out of so many local people who
embraced what Nichols was saying. It was almost a mirror image of the
racist examples I used in my dissertation on human relations.”
So, over coffee one recent day, I asked Craig and his wife -- who
is white -- how the Nichols episode translated into their discomfort
with Newport Beach.
“We lived at Crystal Cove for several years,” Craig said, “with
every possible kind of human mix. We were embraced there, along with
everyone else. When we all had to leave Crystal Cove, it was a bit of
a culture shock to us to move into Newport Beach, where the lack of
diversity was almost total.”
They made a strong point up front, however, of stressing how well
they have been accepted in their Newport Coast neighborhood, but said
it doesn’t carry over nearly as well into Newport Beach.
There was, for example, the tennis club that Maddy explored first.
She got a quite different reception when she reappeared with her
husband. “They looked at us as if we were from Pluto,” she said.
There are too many restaurants where they are left to wait while
later comers are seated. Tradesmen who encounter Jess and ask if the
man of the house is around. Visitors who are startled when Maddy
introduces Jess as “my husband.” A constant and repeated sense of
being inspected disapprovingly in public places around town.
“We encounter prejudice here all the time,” Craig said, “but it’s
not our issue. It’s their issue. I feel sorry for them. Where there
is no diversity, people live in a vacuum. It’s sad and unfortunate,
but we can’t let this dictate our lives.”
Shortly after he spoke to the City Council, Craig visited the
Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles and came home so deeply moved that
he wrote a letter to Nichols saying, in part: “In an effort to
promote tolerance, sensitivity and the understanding of the power of
words, I would like to personally invite you to visit the Museum of
Tolerance ... with me. I sincerely hope you will accept my invitation
to more fully discover the rewards of diversity.”
He sent copies of this letter to all the council members. That was
five weeks ago. So far, there has been no response. In the same
letter, he encouraged the Newport Beach council to deal frontally
with local racism by forming a human relations committee with the
help of the Orange County Human Relations Commission. As noted in an
earlier column, I offered the same suggestion to City Manager Homer
Bludau, who told me that the city had no need for such a committee.
Meanwhile, a network TV soap opera is using Newport Beach as the
locale for an orgy of mindless rich people, and the state board of
the nation’s largest Latino civil rights organization, in a show of
support for its local members after Nichols’ remarks, held its annual
meeting in Newport Beach because, according to its spokesman, it is
“one of the most controversial communities in California today.”
So how, I asked Craig, can a human relations committee do anything
about such perceptions?
“First of all,” he said, “it could be used as a resource. The
Nichols matter could have been played out in such a committee, with a
recommendation to the City Council for action. And it could always be
used as a mechanism to promote diversity. Even if economics limit
those who can live in Newport Beach, the residents still have to get
along with other people.
“We can’t change prejudice or legislate feelings,” he said, “but
we can attempt to enlighten those who carry prejudice -- to show them
that differences among people are minor, and that we must stop
focusing on those differences and concentrate on the ways we are
alike.
“In Newport Beach, too often, we have no clue about the magnitude
of difficulties in the world while we worry about people sitting on
the grass or palm trees blocking our view,” Craig said. “We have
everything one could want here except enough of the ability to have
compassion for those less fortunate -- and that has put us into the
national news.
“Unless this community starts dealing with racism and prejudice
against people who are non-white, it is going to get worse,” he said.
“It’s time to acknowledge this and turn it around, and the formation
of a human relations committee would be a first step in that
direction.”
If that ever happens, I have a great idea for the guy who should
be put in charge.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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