An Open Letter to Paula Deen:

meinkitchen

Photo Courtesy of: Johnathan M. Lewis

Dear Paula Deen,

So it’s been a tough week for you… believe me you I know something about tough weeks being a beginning food writer and lowly culinary historian.  Of course honey, I’d kill for one of your worst days as I could rest myself on the lanai, the veranda, the portico (okay that was really tongue in cheek), the porch..whatever…as long as its breezy and mosquito-free.  First Food Network now Smithfield.  (Well not so mad about Smithfield—not the most ethical place to shill for, eh, Paula?)

I am currently engaged in a project I began in 2011 called The Cooking Gene Project—my goal to examine family and food history as the descendant of Africans, Europeans and Native Americans—enslaved people and enslavers—from Africa to America and from Slavery to Freedom.  You and I are both human, we are both Americans, we are both quite “healthily” built, and yet none of these labels is more profound for me than the fact we are both Southern.  Sweet tea runs in our blood, in fact is our blood…What I understand to be true, a lot of your critics don’t…which is, as Southerners our ancestors co-created the food and hospitality and manners which you were born to 66 years ago and I, thirty-six.  In the words of scholar Mechal Sobel, this was “a world they made together,” but beyond that, it is a world we make together.  So I speak to you as a fellow Southerner, a cousin if you will, not as a combatant.

To be part of the national surprise towards you saying the word “nigger” in the past (I am a cultural and culinary historian and so therefore I am using the word within context…) is at best naïve and at worst, an attempt to hide the pervasiveness of racism, specifically anti-Black racism in certain currents of American culture—not just Southern.  Take for example the completely un-Christian and inhuman rage at Cheerios for their simple and very American ad showing a beautiful biracial girl talking to her white mother and pouring cereal on the chest of her Black father.  That Cheerio’s had to shut down the comments section says that the idea of inter-human relationships outside of one’s color bracket is for many hiding behind a computer screen—a sign of the apocalypse.  So just like those old spaghetti sauce ads, yes, America, racism—“it’s in there” even when we were prefer it not be.

When you said, “of course,” I wasn’t flabbergasted, I was rather, relieved…In fact we Black Southerners have an underground saying, “better the Southern white man than the Northern one, because at least you know where he stands…” but Paula I knew what you meant, and I knew where you were coming from.  I’m not defending that or saying its right—because it’s that word—and the same racist venom that drove my grandparents into the Great Migration almost 70 years ago. I am not in agreement with esteemed journalist Bob Herbert who said “brothers shouldn’t use it either..” I think women have a right to the word “b….” gay men have a right to the word “queer” or “f…” and it’s up to people with oppressive histories to decide when and where the use of certain pejorative terms is appropriate.  Power in language is not a one way street.  Obviously I am not encouraging you to use the word further, but I am not going to hide behind ideals when the realities of our struggles with identity as a nation are clear.  No sound bite can begin to peel back the layers of this issue.

Some have said you are not a racist.  Sorry, I don’t believe that…I am more of the Avenue Q type—everybody’s—you guessed it—a little bit racist.  This is nothing to be proud of no more than we are proud of our other sins and foibles.  It’s something we should work against.  It takes a lifetime to unlearn taught prejudice or socially mandated racism or even get over strings of negative experiences we’ve had with groups outside of our own.  We have a really lousy language—and I don’t just mean because we took a Spanish and Portuguese word (negro) and turned into the most recognizable racial slur on earth…in any language…because we have a million and one ways to hate, disdain, prejudge, discriminate and yet we hide behind a few paltry words like racism, bigotry, prejudice when we damn well know that we have thousands of words for cars—because we LOVE cars….and food—because we LOVE food—and yet in this language you and I share, how we break down patterns of thought that lead to social discord like racism, are sorely lacking.  We are a cleaver people at hiding our obsessions with downgrading the other.

Problem two…I want you to understand that I am probably more angry about the cloud of smoke this fiasco has created for other issues surrounding race and Southern food.  To be real, you using the word “nigger” a few times in the past does nothing to destroy my world.  It may make me sigh for a few minutes in resentment and resignation, but I’m not shocked or wounded.  No victim here.  Systemic racism in the world of Southern food and public discourse not your past epithets are what really piss me off.  There is so much press and so much activity around Southern food and yet the diversity of people of color engaged in this art form and telling and teaching its history and giving it a future are often passed up or disregarded.  Gentrification in our cities, the lack of attention to Southern food deserts often inhabited by the non-elites that aren’t spoken about, the ignorance and ignoring of voices beyond a few token Black cooks/chefs or being called on to speak to our issues as an afterthought is what gets me mad. In the world of Southern food, we are lacking a diversity of voices and that does not just mean Black people—or Black perspectives!  We are surrounded by culinary injustice where some Southerners take credit for things that enslaved Africans and their descendants played key roles in innovating.  Barbecue, in my lifetime, may go the way of the Blues and the banjo….a relic of our culture that whisps away.  That tragedy rooted in the unwillingness to give African American barbecue masters and other cooks an equal chance at the platform is far more galling than you saying “nigger,” in childhood ignorance or emotional rage or social whimsy.

Culinary injustice is what you get where you go to plantation museums and enslaved Blacks are not even talked about, but called servants.  We are invisible.  Visitors come from all over to marvel at the architecture and wallpaper and windowpanes but forget the fact that many of those houses were built by enslaved African Americans or that the food that those plantations were renowned for came from Black men and Black women truly slaving away in the detached kitchens.  Imagine how I, a culinary historian and living history interpreter feel during some of these tours where my ancestors are literally annihilated and whisked away to the corners of those rooms, dying multiple deaths of anonymity and cultural amnesia.  I’m so tired of reading about how “okra” is an “African word.”(For land’s sake ya know “apple” isn’t a “European word…” its an English word that comes from German like okra comes from Igbo and Twi!) I am so tired of seeing people of African descent relegated to the tertiary status when even your pal Alton Brown has said, it was enslaved Black people cooking the food.  Culinary injustice is the annihilation of our food voices—past, present and foreseeable future—and nobody will talk about that like they are talking about you and the “n word.” For shame.

You see Paula, your grits may not be like mine, but one time I saw you make hoecakes on your show and I never heard tell of where them hoecakes really came from.  Now not to compare apples and oranges but when I was a boy it was a great pleasure to hear Nathalie Dupree talk about how beaten biscuits and country captain and gumbo started.    More often than not, she gave a nod to my ancestors.  Don’t forget that the Southern food you have been crowned the queen of was made into an art largely in the hands of enslaved cooks, some like the ones who prepared food on your ancestor’s Georgia plantation.  You, just like me cousin, stand squarely on what late playwright August Wilson called, “the self defining ground of the slave quarter.”  There and in the big house kitchen, Africa, Europe and Native America(s) melded and became a fluid genre of world cuisine known as Southern food.  Your barbecue is my West African babbake, your fried chicken, your red rice, your hoecake, your watermelon, your black eyed peas, your crowder peas, your muskmelon, your tomatoes, your peanuts, your hot peppers, your Brunswick stew and okra soup, benne, jambalaya, hoppin’ john, gumbo, stewed greens and fat meat—have inextricable ties to the plantation South and its often Black Majority coming from strong roots in West and Central Africa.

Don’t be fooled by the claims that Black people don’t watch you.  We’ve been watching you.  We all have opinions about you.  You were at one point sort of like our Bill Clinton. (You know the first Black president?)   When G. Garvin and the Neely’s and the elusive B Smith (who they LOVED to put on late on Saturday nights or early Sunday mornings!) were few and far between, you were our sorta soul mama, the white lady with the gadonkadonk and the sass and the signifying who gave us a taste of the Old Country-which is for us—the former Confederacy and just beyond.  Furthermore, as a male who practices an “alternative lifestyle” (and by the way I am using that phrase in bitter sarcastic irony), it goes without saying that many of my brothers have been you for Halloween, and you are right up there with Dolly Parton, Dixie Carter and Tallullah Bankhead of old as one of the muses of the Southern gay male imagination.  We don’t despise you, we don’t even think you made America fat.  We think you are a businesswoman who has made some mistakes, has character flaws like everybody else and in fact is now a scapegoat.  I find it hard to be significantly angry at you when during the last election the re-disenfranchisement of the Negro—like something from the time of W.E.B. Du Bois was a national cause celebre. Hell, today the voting rights act was gutted and I’m sure many think this is a serious win for “democracy.”  If  I want to be furious about something racial—well America—get real—we’ve had a good twelve years of really really rich material that the National media has set aside to talk about Paula Deen.  Yes Paula,  in light of all these things, you are the ultimate, consummate racist, and the one who made us fat, and the reason why American food sucks and ……you don’t believe that any more than I do. 

A fellow Georgian of yours once said that one day the “sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners would sit down at the table of brotherhood.”  Well no better time than now.  Paula, I don’t have to tell you redemption is yours to choose, to have and to embrace.  As a Jew, I extend the invitation to do teshuvah—which means to repent—but better—to return to a better state, a state of shalem–wholeness and shalom–peace.  You used food to rescue your life, your family and your destiny.  I admire that.  I know that I have not always made good choices and to be honest none of us are perfect.  This is an opportunity to grow and renew.

If there is anything The Cooking Gene has taught me—its about the art of reconciliation.  We aren’t happy with you right now.  Then again some of the things you have said or have been accused of saying aren’t surprising.  In so many ways, that’s the more unfortunate aspect.  We are resigned to believe and understand that our neighbor is to be suspected before respected.  It doesn’t have to be this way, and it doesn’t have to go on forever.  As a species we cannot conduct ourselves in this manner.  As creations of the Living G-d, we are commanded to be better.  You and I are both the descendants of people who lived, fought, died, suffered so that we could be better in our own time.  I’m disappointed but I’m not heartless.  And better yet, praise G-d I ain’t hopeless.

If you aren’t busy on September 7, and I surely doubt that you are not busy—I would like to invite you to a gathering at a historic antebellum North Carolina plantation.  We are doing a fundraiser dinner for Historic Stagville, a North Carolina Historic Site.  One of the largest in fact, much larger than the one owned by your great-grandfather’s in Georgia.  30,000 acres once upon a time with 900 enslaved African Americans working the land over time. They grew tobacco, corn, wheat and cotton.  I want you to walk the grounds with me, go into the cabins, and most of all I want you to help me cook.  Everything is being prepared using locally sourced food, half of which we hope will come from North Carolina’s African American farmers who so desperately need our support.  Everything will be cooked according to 19th century methods.  So September 7, 2013, if you’re brave enough, let’s bake bread and break bread together at Historic Stagville. This isn’t publicity this is opportunity.  Leave the cameras at home.  Don’t worry, it’s cool, nobody will harm you if you’re willing to walk to the Mourner’s Bench.  Better yet, I’ll be there right with you.

G-d Bless,

Culinary Historian, Food Writer and Living History Interpreter

Michael W. Twitty

For a link to a video of the event Paula missed:  click here.

For a link to the MAD Symposium video where I talk about culinary justice and injustice: click here.

998 comments on “An Open Letter to Paula Deen

  1. Jon Eveland's avatar
    Jon Eveland

    Great essay sir! Aloha from Hawaii!

    Like

  2. Dave Sanders's avatar
    Dave Sanders

    Today I am now a follower of you. I really like your respect for all people and your acknowledgement that we are human.

    I do have a question though. Why G-d? Why not God?

    Like

  3. Julz's avatar

    As an English professor, avid cook, and admirer of the flawed human race, I thank you for an elegant and deeply heartfelt essay. Well done.

    Like

  4. Mothy Ham's avatar

    You are one cool dude

    Like

  5. redheadedstepsister's avatar
    redheadedstepsister

    So grateful for your voice.
    Huge respect.

    Like

  6. Snow's avatar

    You are a blessing upon us, thank you for articulating this so well!!

    Like

  7. Ellen's avatar

    Darlin, if I could hug your neck I would. I think your letter is eloquent and speaks so many of the words i couldn’t seem to find. i would love to come and cook with you and would welcome you on my Alabama kitchen as well. id be proud to call myself your southern soul sister. Sending hugs your way.

    Like

  8. Gail Monk's avatar
    Gail Monk

    Your story brought by some memories. I have a story as well , A friend of mines was in the U.S. Navy and he had to work along side this white guy. The first day they work together the white guy told my friend (which is black ) , I don’t like black people, my friend said I don’t like white people. The moral of the story they became best friend, because they measure each other by the content of their character. Each did not like the other ones race because this is how they grew up and this is how they was taught back in the days. As I say this about Paula Deen she told the true about her life back in the days, and as years past she learned better. You should be afraid of Food Network, Target, Sears, Walmart and others companies that drop her. First they was to quick to drop her, secondly what do you think go on in those board rooms at their corporate offices. Do you really think they are thinking about black people well being? They only thinking about us spending money in there stores. These companies are the one that racist.They use Paula Deen to help boost their profits. Please think about this, workers at Walmart most are working for a little over minimum wages ,low benefits and the owners are billionaires. Racisms will always be in country until the end of time , we been call names all our lives. The way I see this , we can let the news media and others try to use this and throw our focus off what we really need to be focus on and that surviving in this country, not only for ourselves but for generations to come as well. As for Paula Deen she will survive because she is white and this is the way life is, no matter how we look at it. Never heard of your charity send me some information, I am a native on NC.

    Like

  9. THB's avatar

    Thank you! I received this from a very dear friend. There are no words to tell you how much I appreciated your kindness and diligence in actually wording this so beautifully along with educating us ….

    Like

  10. Dawn Johnson's avatar
    Dawn Johnson

    What an interesting read! Thank you for sharing this (your) perspective with us. I believe I’ll be back to read you again.

    Like

  11. Ann's avatar

    Thank you. Beautiful. This is how to do things – teach, engage, invite to the table. And don’t let ourselves be sidetracked from the major political issues of the day by a media that gives more time to entertainers/personalities… And btw, I was raised in Philly, spent 16 years living in Boston, and have lived in Northern Virginia for the past 10. And, yes, plenty of racism up north.

    Like

  12. Linda Ball's avatar

    Thank you Michael for putting words that matter into the current dialogue. Paula Deen would be blessed to call you friend. I hope she able to understand your invitation.

    Like

  13. sherrelle's avatar
    sherrelle

    Speechless! What a wonderful article…eloquently & truthfully told from the heart and soul. Love it.

    Like

  14. LisaGregory's avatar

    You Michael Twitty are a true gentleman…And if more people adopted your attitude, this world would be a better place. I was born and raised in New York. I spent the 1st 27 years living in the melting pot. I to, knew a little about prejudice and racism. We were the only Puerto Ricans living in an all “white” neighborhood. Luckily, we were embraced. My best friend, next door neighbor,was Jewish and we lived across the street from a German family. No problems. There were also the Irish, the Polish and the Italians on the block. All of us kids never experienced prejudice and racism. Yes I am sure it existed, but we didn’t feel it as we were not taught to hate because of ethnic origin. It wasn’t until I moved to the south, where I have been the last 25 years, that I knew prejudice and racism really existed. I remember when we decided to move to Florida’s West Coast. Someone casually said to me, “Don’t tell anyone you are Puerto Rican when you move there. Southerners are REALLY prejudice. I was kind of scared. I married an Italian, whose parents changed their last name from Giangregorio to Gregory..That was American sounding. I thought I was safe…And I was…Yes, the KKK lived miles from my neighborhood, and I made sure I didn’t flaunt my ethnicity in public for fear of them finding out I lived in a neighboring subdivision. But I have lived here 25 years without a problem. I guess I am fortunate to live in a neighborhood where we are all treated as equals. Black, White, Asian, Hispanic…Doesn’t matter..We all bleed red.Thank you for your honest candor. For extending the Olive Branch, for being you…I hope that Paula takes you up on your offer. My daughter just graduated Le Cordon Bleu last year. 20 years old. She is working her way up the ranks and wants to learn foods historically. Her first gig was the Food and Wine Festival when she was working for Disney at Epcot. A taste of the world left her hungry for more. She is now working at The Sandpeart Resort and Spa on Clearwater Beach. A 4 star resort…But she sees the deep south in her future, The bible belt, or perhaps New Orleans. She is not afraid. Why?? Because she loves everyone equally. She doesn’t see skin color. She wasn’t taught to. But she knows the differences exist. Unfortunately prejudice and racism still exists. But with her love of food, she hopes to rise above it. Hit common ground. We all eat. She hopes that will break down barriers..The love of food and it’s history… xo

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  15. Susan lopez's avatar

    so sensible … thank you! go forth, spread your teachings and change our world ❤

    Like

  16. Heather Usrey Clements's avatar

    Most intelligent response to this tempest in a teapot I’ve read! Really hope she sees it, and takes you up on your offer! I must admit, I was at first puzzled by G_d, until I read the FIRST time you explained it. At which point I facepalmed and said “Oh, yeah, I knew that!” I just had only heard it in connection with Scriptures, and didn’t connect it with modern practice.

    Like

  17. Amina's avatar

    An eloquent piece, however, it just wasn’t the word that has caused concern. You and many others don’t adequately address Paula’s antebellum yearning for those days when some of your ancestry was under one of the most brutal oppressive systems in the world. To pine for those days and for heaven’s sake entertain a wedding that would reflect those days of ‘splendor’ as Paula would reframe them leaves one perplexed. This woman was also accused of perpetuating a hostile work environment. She speaks of her long time friendship with a black man that she cautions not to stand in front of the blackboard…so folks can see him. You can attribute this to the south if you want to or assert on how bad it is in the north but those of us who don’t care to break bread now with Paula will go on with our lives, do wonderful things for humanity and embrace those who truly respect and appreciate the differences of others. The latter would also entail losing the condescending and patronizing attitude and platitudes she espouses. One person said it best…Paula loves and views black people like she loves her pets! Remember she tearfully told millions on the Today Show that….I IS WHAT I IS! Hmmmmm………

    Like

  18. evelyn's avatar

    Thank you Michael for your beautiful response. God Bless you.

    Like

  19. Dreamutter's avatar
    Dreamutter

    I have a question. Was that Galloping Gourmet guy not considered a Southern cook? He was from Louisiana, I think. We used to love watching him.

    Like

  20. GRIT's avatar

    First sensible thing I’ve read – all the best to you — wish I could neal at Mourner’s Bench.

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  21. GRIT's avatar

    First sensible thing I’ve read – all the best to you – wish I could meet you at Mourners Bench.

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  22. MAB's avatar

    Michael, in the last several days the media coverage of the Paula Deen controversy has left me breathless. Thank you for pumping oxygen back into the room and articulating so beautifully the complexity of the relationship between whites and blacks in the South and their shared humanity. I loved your discussion of the origins of Southern food. Though I knew about hoe cake, I didn’t know about some of the others. You give me faith in the human race. What a beautiful soul you have…………..Peace.

    Like

  23. justobserving's avatar
    justobserving

    As a Jewish person, do you find Jessie Jackson, Jr.’s use of the term “hymie town” just as offensive?

    Like

  24. Karen way's avatar

    I am a born- raised and am now, still living in the south which I am sooo proud to have been raised and am still living- the southern happiness. My problem is with you, Paula, is the embellishment of the south accent and the y’all you are making millions on, and are now crying how you never meant any harm or intent. What happened to your roots and who made you who you are today. If I know the flavors of food, which I do, and could employ others to do my work, I could be financially stable as you are. My advice is to go back to your roots where you had to fight on a monthly basis and pay bills and become humble as you once were, as we the common southern folk, the ones who made you who you are today and stop your whinning in a multi-million dollar business you are in and gives thanks to our God in Heaven what you have today. Be happy in what you have, there are others in poverty with no home.

    Like

  25. Nick's avatar

    Thank you for your comments on this issue. If only Paula had been more contemplative and thoughtful in her own response to the situation. I think her biggest problem now is that she appears unrepentant even as she faces the cameras.

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  26. Patrick Hall's avatar

    Paula Dean is from an era that is slowly dying off. She was raised in an enviroment that did not think about the power or meaning of the words you spoke. I remember being in a store in 1987 a women asked a woker in the store how much the Brazil nuts were a pound and the worker got on the P.A. asked the manager of the store how much the “nigger toes” were! That is what the nuts were called when she was growing up. To her it was not racist, it was just what the name she was taught. The manager called her to his office and I’m assuming “educated” her on the word. If you don’t know any better or you are not aware of the impact of your words is it racist or just ignorance, and how many decades should one be held libel for not understanding?

    Like

    • Chiffon S's avatar

      Patrick, I’m African/American women, living in the Southwest, I know this is a touchy subject and, is not a funny matter, but I find my self laughing so hard at your 1987 story, I’m about ready to fall off my chair, I’m laughing so hard I don’t think I’m going to make It to the bathroom to pay my water bill.LMBO. @ Michael, well said.

      Like

  27. Annie's avatar

    Great essay. And an introduction to a great website. Thanks for doing what you do and saying what you say. I’ll be back to read more.

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  28. michaelwtwitty's avatar

    It’s an ancient Jewish custom.

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    • Ohiogirl's avatar
      Ohiogirl

      Michael,
      Many things are custom – oppression, slavery – that does not make them right, just because they are custom.
      In this case, with the spelling, it’s a custom of respect.
      And that’s all good.

      Like

    • David P's avatar

      I’m not Jewish, but yes I know that it is a Jewish custom. It is felt that it is neither necessary nor that mortal man is even privileged enough to say His name in its entirety. Might want to do your homework friend before being so quick to chastise.

      Like

      • Ohiogirl's avatar
        Ohiogirl

        I’m not chastising. Totally get the spelling thing.

        Just as Michael so beautifully put things in perspective, it’s a good time to remember that many wrongs are often continued, under the name of custom and tradition. That’s all!

        Like

  29. Sharon's avatar

    I have been reading all about Paula’s story and this is the first one that has opened up my eyes to your history. As a middle-aged white woman raised in Louisiana, I too was not surprised by what I read about her. But I truly had never, ever heard about the fact that all the Southern dishes I knew came about from Black slaves. That their contribution is completely lacking is absolutely true – I had never been taught that. There are some good shows on Food Network by black cooks, but the network is clearly not doing enough to educate us on this historical fact. In my small, white world, I assumed it was passed down from my ancestors. Anyway, thanks for opening my eyes. I have decided that I am going to add that plantation to my list of places to take my child – we both need to see a place where 900 people were forced to live their life in bondage. Maybe it will get us out of our complacency and acceptance of the history we are taught in the public school system.

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  30. Dr. Andrew Joseph Pegoda's avatar

    This is a very powerful, effective, spot-on letter. Thank you.

    Like

  31. Venessa's avatar

    I read this twice. The first time because it was fascinating, the second because it was liberating. It is a wonderful example that regardless of spin and rhetoric, the basic issues continue to come into play – that humans share a common thread of humanity – that if I dishonor you, your contribution, your voice, your place – I dishonor those exact things in myself. My family immigrated from Eastern Europe and I have always found it interesting and slightly irritating that folks think Mrs. T really made Periogi. Actually, it was my old Slovak granny or maybe my polish friend’s Babushka who taught her… teaching us how to do that properly around the family table of 12 of us, each with different roles and responsibilities, but always together as a community and a family. Without one person, the dough flopped, the filling overcooked, the spice was all wrong. We all had special knowledge of the part we played and without our contribution, or our collective history around food, family and faith what runs in our DNA would be made of dust instead of Hot Paprika, and that matters. But I won’t pretend that in my youth I didn’t rage and storm about the boxed versions of my family’s food – that there aren’t still days, particularly when I’m missing my granny and her stories and the flour dusting the front of her apron but never hitting the floor, that I still get jumped up about it. But this writing – your writing, Mr. Twitty, reminded me that I can and ought focus on my own ability to act compassionately and graciously while honoring my truth as well as your truth. That I can share those moments of love around food, the stories of my ancestors, and the history of my family with people who are willing to do the same – and thereby I gain the truth and historical knowledge from our shared human family. Thank you for this lovely reminder that coming from a place of love to “the floor of the slave quarter” is the thing that unites us all. Thank you.

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  32. Travis Hamiter's avatar

    Mr. Twitty I am quite proud to say I was born in SC still live there and hopefully will til g-d calls me. I have had many meal that you mentioned and over my lifetime 40+ years I have learned much of the history, may I say BRAVO to those engenious cooks of the past. Why is this an issue in todays world with all the other issues in this nation and world. Why what someone said 1 yr ago, 10, 20, 25 what ever let it go time has passed for this kind of MUD slinging. Bravo and u said it quite eloqently. Keep COOKING, writing, learning history of the great food’s of the southern UNITED States as we all need to do.
    Thank You.

    Like

  33. Seale Broughton's avatar
    Seale Broughton

    Michael,
    You just gained a new fan. Well said.

    Like

  34. Jonathan Liedy's avatar
    Jonathan Liedy

    So many comment sections across the internet are full of bile and negativity. I’ve enjoyed the uplifting enthusiasm on display in the comments almost as much as I enjoyed your article.

    Like

  35. Dex's avatar

    Is there some way to make sure Ms. Deen knows about your invitation? I saw more intelligence in your article than I have seen in quite awhile.Thank you for having the courage to write it.

    Like

    • Jen Martin's avatar

      I posted the link on her facebook page.

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      • Dex's avatar

        Thank you, Jen.

        Like

      • Jen Martin's avatar

        Well, don’t thank me yet. It looks as though my post has been removed (I just checked on it)…Perhaps if other readers posted the link as well it might get some notice. Like you, my first response after finishing the letter wa “She has to see this!”, Ib fact, she’s the person who needs to see it most.

        Like

  36. mark nawrocki's avatar
    mark nawrocki

    That was probably THE most eloquently stated, best written, and most insightful thing I have ever read! Well stated SIR! Well said!

    Like

  37. Heather Etchevers's avatar

    Glad to have made your acquaintance through this excellent, thoughtful and articulate blog post. I’ll be back for more.

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  38. Dave's avatar

    Michael, very well said. Thank you for your amazing words, I have grown from your insight and wisdom. Best of luck to you?

    Like

  39. Dave's avatar

    Michael, very well said. Thank you for your amazing words, I have grown from your insight and wisdom. Best of luck to you!

    Like

  40. darlinjackie's avatar

    There is only one response for this post–Bravo, Mr. Twitty, Bravo.

    Like

  41. Freddie's avatar

    Thanks for seeing the real truth,and speaking it.Now let’s hope Paula sees her real truth, and speak it. Well put!!!!!

    Like

  42. Scott's avatar

    Thank you for explaning G-d. God bless.

    Like

  43. Peggy's avatar

    Dear Michael,
    If , as I believe, there are no accidents, the Paula Deen debacle served to bring your fine mind and fascinating takes on important issue to the fore. I will watch YOUR cooking show.

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  44. Mark Schueler's avatar

    I have been stunned by the amount of outcry over Paula Deen. As a liberal, white male who has lived his entire life in a southern tobacco town, I am disappointed that she is perpetuating the caricature of Southerners as backwards, racist, and bigoted. I don’t believe, though, that she should be vilified to the extent that she has been, and made into the scapegoat that she has been. I have heard similar sentiment to yours, and had several similar conversations with many of my southern friends–black, white, and yes, even yellow (yep, in this whole discourse about southerners and southern heritage, we forget that there are OTHERS–latino, asian, etc–that have been born and raised in the south.) Thank you for your thoughtful essay!

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  45. Debi's avatar

    Lovely, heartfelt, articulate message. Let’s bring the ghosts into the light and banish them. Shalom!

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  46. L Hollis's avatar
    L Hollis

    Thought provoking and extremely well written piece! Enlightening!! Thank you so much Michael for carving through the fat and getting to the, as my grandma used to say, “nitty gritty” of the matter! Superb!

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  47. jeolin2's avatar

    What a thoughtful and insightful piece. As a Jewish woman living with a Nigerian American man for the last 15 years we have both had to learn a lot and learn to accept and sometimes even love the foibles of our very mixed cultures. I had never heard of you before a friend posted your blog on Facebook but I can guarantee you have a new follower. I look forward to reading more.

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  48. Cheryl's avatar

    A well written article. However let us write an article about those thugs in the corporate world – ie WalMart, Sears, Home Depot, etc. who have behaved as a spoiled child – tossing their toys around the room. Paula is human and who is not? This controversy reminds me of the Jesus comment of 1966 and John Lennon who was the victim of a similar well oiled witch hunt. The Beatles stopped touring after that and who could blame them? As for that word – I hear that word a lot from black women when they are discussing their black men. What a double standard.

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  49. Laura C Cutshall's avatar

    Mr. Twitty, I’m unable to find information on Historic Stagville’s event in September, but I’d love to know more. If I can’t make the drive, I imagine some of my friends in NC would love to know about it. Where can we get more details? Stagville’s website doesn’t yet list the event.

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  50. WhiteGirlFromTheNorth's avatar
    WhiteGirlFromTheNorth

    This really made me re-think my own perspective on the whole debacle. The power of the word is right up there with the power of food.

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