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Lee A. Daniels, communications director for the New York-based NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Inc., praised Dattel's book as an "epic." He said it meticulously outlines how
-- by law and by social pressure -- the U.S. carried out a policy of containment that kept blacks in the South during and after slavery and in Northern ghettos later. Daniels said Dattel challenges a broadly held belief that racial oppression was limited by geography or carried out only by certain groups of people
-- an assumption Daniels said is "one of the ways America takes comfort from its slave past." "In fact, all of America condoned, really, the oppression of all black people," said Daniels, who read Dattel's book upon the recommendation of a friend. Dattel worked in investment banking from 1969 to 1992 and his career took him to Tokyo, Hong Kong and London. Since 1998, he has been a financial-institutions adviser to the Pentagon. He spent three years writing "Cotton and Race" -- his second book after 1994's "The Sun That Never Rose," an analysis of Japan's failed financial institutions during the 1980s. He had been researching the race and cotton since he was at Yale in 1963. Dattel was raised in what he called a "very assimilated" Jewish community in Ruleville. The Mississippi Delta town now has a population of 3,234, of whom 81 percent are black and 19 percent are white. At the time he lived there, Dattel said, the population was more evenly split between black and white. From 1997 to 2004, he traveled to several states with Clifton Taulbert, author of the 1990 memoir, "Once Upon a Time When We Were Colored." In a presentation they called "Parallel Lives," they discussed what it was like for Dattel to grow up Jewish and white, and for Taulbert to grow up black in the Mississippi Delta in the 1950s. Dattel was recently in Jackson to discuss "Cotton and Race," and about 60 people attended his presentation at the state archives. Meredith sat quietly near the back of the room, wearing an Ole Miss baseball cap. Dattel said later he was intrigued to see, in person, the man whose integration of Ole Miss helped propel his own first efforts at explaining race and history. "The symmetry," Dattel said, "was unbelievable."
[Associated
Press;
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