Los Angeles Times

Deaf to the Black experience

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Re “For those of us who aren’t Black, it’s time to listen,” column, June 6

Forty years ago when my partners — two other white guys — and I were writing the movie “Airplane!” we were partially inspired by the film “Shaft.” We had enjoyed it but could not understand some of the dialogue, so we thought it would be fun to cast two Black actors in our movie and subtitle them with stupid whiteguy translatio­ns.

When “Airplane!” opened, I saw the movie with both Black and white audiences (they were rarely mixed). Interestin­gly, the Black audiences laughed at least as hard at the subtitle joke as the white audiences. They really enjoyed the clueless attempt of the white-guy subtitles to explain what the Black men were saying.

It was only then that I realized we had inadverten­tly identified in a comedic way a truth about American history: the deafness of white America to the Black experience.

The people speaking out have provided a valuable lesson about the repercussi­ons of hundreds of years of institutio­nal racism in America. Columns by LZ Granderson and Erika D. Smith, in particular, have been especially powerful and eyeopening.

We must listen. Obviously this is just one step in a long journey, but I’m genuinely hopeful that dialogue will not fade again, white America will hear it, and progress will be made. Jim Abrahams

Santa Monica

There were white people in the United States who joined the civil rights protests in the 1960s. There were so many, including people just like myself, who fought then and continued for all these years fighting inequality.

I was a freshman at USC in 1964 when I took two life-changing classes on race and society. I volunteere­d in Watts, and I was active in Operation Bootstrap. I continued speaking out later in life and never let prejudice go ignored.

Now in my 70s, I take a knee at football games and have been called unpatrioti­c. I know what I am doing is true patriotism.

I am so excited to see more young people involved; hopefully, they will be voting. I am sad only that we’re still fighting for something as obvious as equality for all. Patricia Kourt Los Angeles

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