¶ … Color of Water is an autobiographical account of the lives of the author, James McBride and his white mother Ruth, and explores issues of racial prejudice and religious discrimination. While the author's journey as an African-American is important, it cannot be read in the same context as other commonly known stories of suffering and prejudice in the South. This is because James McBride's story was influenced and defined by the perpetual presence of a white person in his life, his mother. In other words James' mother Ruth McBride played an extremely important role in the way her children perceived racism and related problems.
While white people have always been severely criticized for their mistreatment of other races, this book gives us a different image of whites. The book explains that not all white people are racist and that for some such folks, forces of love and affection are superior to all other forces including that of race and color. Ruth belonged to a white Jewish family that moved from Poland to United States and encountered discrimination on account of its faith.
Growing up in Virginia, she realized that the world was sharply divided into various colors and faiths and that some of them were superior to others. Discrimination was thus a problem not exclusively encountered by blacks but could also be faced by people who did not follow the majority religion. For Ruth, her faith became a problem at school where she would be called "Christ killer," or "Jew Baby" (McBride, p. 40).
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