The Boy Who Painted Christ Black
He
was the smartest boy in the Muskogee County School - for colored children. Everybody even remotely connected with the
school knew this. The teacher always pronounced
his name with profound gusto as she pointed him out as the ideal student. Once I heard her say: “If he were white he
might, some day, become President.”
Only Aaron Crawford wasn’t white; quite the contrary. His skin was so solid black that it glowed,
reflecting an inner virtue that was strange, and beyond my comprehension.
In
many ways he looked like something that was awkwardly put together. Both his nose and his lips seemed a trifle
too large for his face. To say he was
ugly would be unjust and to say he was handsome would be gross exaggeration.
Truthfully, I could never make up my mind about him. Sometimes he looked like something out of a book of ancient
history...looked as if he was left over from that magnificent era before the
machine age came and marred the earth’s natural beauty.
His
great variety of talent often startled the teachers. This caused his classmates
to look upon him with a mixed feeling of awe and envy.
Before
Thanksgiving, he always drew turkeys and pumpkins on the blackboard. On George Washington’s birthday, he drew
large American flags surrounded by little hatchets. It was these small masterpieces that made him the most
talked-about colored boy in Columbus, Georgia.
The Negro principal of the Muskogee County School that he would some day
be a great painter, like Henry O. Tanner.
For
the teacher’s birthday, which fell on a day about a week before commencement,
Aaron Crawford painted the picture that caused an uproar, and a turning point,
at the Muskogee County School. The
moment he entered the room that morning, all eyes fell on him. Besides his torn book holder, he was
carrying a large-framed concern wrapped in old newspapers. As he went to his seat, the teacher’s eyes
followed his every motion, a curious wonderment mirrored in them conflicting
with the half-smile that wreathed her face.
Aaron
put his books down, them smiling broadly, advanced toward the teacher’s
desk. His alert eyes were so bright
with joy that they were almost frightening. .. Temporarily, there was no other
sound in the room.
Aaron
stared questioningly at her and she moved her hand back to the present
cautiously, as if it were a living thing with vicious characteristics. I am sure it was the one thing she least
expected.
With
a quick, involuntary movement I rose up from my desk. A series of submerged murmurs spread through the room rising to a
distinct monotone. The teacher turned
toward the children, staring reproachfully.
They did not move their eyes from the present that Aaron had brought
her... It was a large picture of Christ -- painted black!
Aaron
Crawford went back to his seat, a feeling of triumph reflecting in his every
movement.
The
teacher faced us. Her curious
half-smile had blurred into a mild bewilderment. She searched the bright faces before her and started to smile
again, occasionally stealing quick glances at the large picture propped on her
desk, as though doing so were forbidden amusement.
“Aaron,”
she spoke at last, a slight tinge of uncertainty in her tone, “this is a most
welcome present. Thanks. I will
treasure it.” She paused, then went on
speaking, a trifle more coherent than before.
“Looks like you are going to be quite an artist...Suppose you come
forward and tell the class how you came to paint this remarkable picture.”
When
he rose to speak, to explain about the picture, a hush fell tightly over the
room, and the children gave him all of their attention...something they rarely
did for the teacher. He did not speak
at first; he just stood there in front of the room, toying absently with his
hands, observing his audience carefully, like a great concert artist.
“It
was like this,” he said, placing full emphasis on every word. “You see, my uncle who lives in New York
teaches classes in Negro History at the Y.M.C.A. When he visited us last year he was telling me about the many
great black folks who have made history.
He said black folks were once the most powerful people on earth. When I asked him about Christ, he said no
one ever proved whether he was black or white.
Somehow a feeling came over me that he was a black man, ‘cause he was so
kind and forgiving, kinder than I have ever seen white people be. So, when I painted his picture I couldn’t
help but paint it as I thought it was.”
After
this, the little artist sat down, smiling broadly, as if he had gained entrance
to a great storehouse of knowledge that ordinary people could neither acquire
nor comprehend.
The
teacher, knowing nothing else to do under prevailing circumstances, invited the
children to rise from their seats and come forward so they could get a complete
view of Aaron’s unique piece of art.
When
I came close to the picture, I noticed it was painted with the kind of paint
you get in the five and ten cents stores.
Its shape was blurred slightly, as if someone had jarred the frame
before the paint had time to dry. The
eyes of Christ were deepset and sad, very much like those of Aaron’s father,
who was a deacon in the local Baptist Church.
This picture of Christ looked much different from the one I saw hanging
on the wall when I was in Sunday School.
It looked more like a helpless Negro, pleading silently for mercy.
For
the next few days, there was much talk about Aaron’s picture.
The
school term ended the following week and Aaron’s picture, along with the best
handwork done by the students that year, was on display in the assembly
room. Naturally, Aaron’s picture graced
the place of honor.
There
was no book work to be done on commencement day, and joy was rampant among the
children. The girls in their brightly
colored dresses gave the school the delightful air of Spring awakening.
In
the middle of the day all the children were gathered in the small
assembly. On this day we were always
favored with a visit from a man whom all the teachers spoke of with mixed
esteem and fear. Professor Danual, they
called him, and they always pronounced his name with reverence. He was
supervisor of all the city schools, including those small and poorly equipped
ones set aside for colored children.
The
great man arrived almost at the end of our commencement exercises. On seeing him enter the hall, the children
rose, bowed courteously, and sat down again, their eyes examining him as if he
were a circus freak.
He
was a tall white man with solid gray hair that made his lean face seem paler
than it actually was. His eyes were the
clearest blue I have ever seen. They
were the only lifelike things about him.
As
he made his way to the front of the room the Negro principal, George Du Vaul,
was walking ahead of him, cautiously preventing anything from getting in his
way. As he passed me, I heard the
teachers, frightened, sucking in their breath, felt the tension tightening.
A
large chair was in the center of the rostrum.
It had been daintily polished and the janitor had laboriously
recushioned its bottom. The supervisor
went straight to it without being guided, knowing that this pretty splendor was
reserved for him.
Presently
the Negro principal introduced the distinguished guest and he favored us with a
short speech. It wasn’t a very
important speech. Almost at the end of
it, I remembered him saying something about he wouldn’t be surprised if one of
us boys grew up to be a great colored man, like Booker T. Washington.
After
he sat down, the school chorus sang two spirituals and the girls in the fourth
grade did an Indian folk dance. This
brought the commencement program to an end.
After
this the supervisor came down from the rostrum, his eyes tinged with curiosity,
and began to view the array of handwork on display in front of the chapel.
Suddenly
his face underwent a strange rejuvenation.
His clear blue eyes flickered in astonishment. He was looking at Aaron Crawford’s picture of Christ.
Mechanically he moved his stooped form closer to the picture and stood gazing
fixedly at it, curious and undecided, as though it were a dangerous animal that
would rise any moment and spread destruction.
We
waited tensely for his next movement.
The silence was almost suffocating. At last he twisted himself around
and began to search the grim faces before him.
The fiery glitter of his eyes abated slightly as they rested on the
Negro principal, protestingly.
“Who
painted this sacrilegious nonsense?” he demanded sharply.
“I
painted it, sir.” These were Aaron’s
words, spoken hesitantly. He wetted his
lips timidly and looked up at the supervisor, his eyes voicing a sad plea for
understanding.
He
spoke again, this time more coherently.
“Th’ principal said a colored person have jes as much right paintin’ Jesus
black as a white person have paintin’ him white. And he says... ” At this point he halted abruptly, as if to
search for his next words. A strong
tinge of bewilderment dimmed the glow of his solid black face. He stammered out a few more words, then stopped
again.
The
supervisor strode a few steps toward him. At last color had swelled some of the
lifelessness out of his lean face.
“Well,
go on!” he said, enragedly, ”...I’m still listening.”
Aaron
moved his lips pathetically but no words passed them. His eyes wandered around the room, resting
finally, with an air of hope, on the face of the Negro principal. After a moment, he jerked his face in
another direction, regretfully, as if something he had said had betrayed an
understanding between him and the principal.
Presently
the principal stepped forward to defend the school’s prize student.
“I
encouraged the boy in painting that picture,” he said firmly. “And it was with my permission that he
brought the picture into this school. I
don’t think the boy is so far wrong in painting Christ black. The artists of all other races have painted
whatever God they worship to resemble themselves. I see no reason why we should be immune from that privilege. After all, Christ was born in that part of
the world that had always been predominantly populated by colored people. There
is a strong possibility that he could have been a Negro.”
But
for the monotonous lull of heavy breathing, I would have sworn that his words
had frozen everyone in the hall. I had
never heard the little principal speak so boldly to anyone, black or white.
The
supervisor swallowed dumbfoundedly. His
face was aglow in silent rage.
“Have
you been teaching these children things like that?” he asked the Negro
principal, sternly.
“I
have been teaching them that their race has produced great kings and queens as
well as slaves and serfs,” the principal said.
“The time is long overdue when we should let the world know that we
erected and enjoyed the benefits of a splendid civilization long before the
people of Europe had a written language.”
The
supervisor shook with anger as he spoke. “You are not being paid to teach such
things in this school, and I am demanding your resignation for overstepping
your limit as principal.”
George
Du Vaul did not speak. A strong quiver swept over his sullen face. He revolved himself slowly and walked out of
the room towards his office...
Some
of the teachers followed the principal out of the chapel, leaving the
crestfallen children restless and in a quandary about what to do next. Finally we started back to our rooms...
A
few days later I heard that the principal had accepted a summer job as art
instructor of a small high school somewhere in south Georgia and had gotten
permission from Aaron’s parents to take him along so he could continue to
encourage him in his painting.
I
was on my way home when I saw him leaving his office. He was carrying a large briefcase and some books tucked under his
arm. He had already said good-by to all
the teachers, and strangely, he did not look brokenhearted. As he headed for the large front door, he
readjusted his horn-rimmed glasses, but did not look back. An air of triumph
gave more dignity to his soldierly stride.
He had the appearance of a man who had done a great thing, something
greater than any ordinary man would do.
Aaron
Crawford was waiting outside for him.
They walked down the street together.
He put his arms around Aaron’s shoulder affectionately. He was talking sincerely to Aaron about
something, and Aaron was listening, deeply earnest.
I
watched them until they were so far down the street that their forms had begun
to blur. Even from this distance I
could see they were still walking in brisk, dignified strides, like two people
who had won some sort of victory.
-
John Henrik Clarke
(abridged)