Sun-Faced Buddha, Moon-Faced Buddha lecture at the Zen Mountain Center (17 August 1971) http://suzukiroshi.sfzc.org/archives/index.cgi/710817V.html 
Context: Communication is — start by understanding — your own understanding about people. Even though you want them to understand you, you know, it is — unless you understand people, it is almost impossible. Don't you think so? Only when you understand people, they may understand you. So even though you do not say anything, if you understand people there is some communication.
                                    
“The colored people of this country know and understand the white people better than the white people know and understand them.”
The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man, ch. 2 (1912).
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James Weldon Johnson 23
writer and activist 1871–1938Related quotes
“We white people think that we know everything.”
Child of Storm (1913), CHAPTER I, ALLAN QUATERMAIN HEARS OF MAMEENA
                                        
                                        Speech at the Church of the Puritans, New York City (May 1863) 
1860s
                                    
                                        
                                        Memo written to , as cited in  "The Partisan" http://www.nytimes.com/1985/03/03/magazine/the-partisan.html, in the New York Times, March 3, 1985 
Judicial opinions 
Context: It is about time the Court faced the fact that the white people in the South don't like the colored people; the Constitution restrains them from effecting this dislike through state action, but it most assuredly did not appoint the Court as a sociological watchdog to rear up every time private discrimination raises its admittedly ugly head. To the extent that this decision advances the frontier of state action and 'social gain,' it pushes back the frontier of freedom of association and majority rule.
                                    
Source: Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (1970), p. 101
From Her Books, I Have Chosen To Stay And Fight, FEMINISM
                                        
                                        Essay in North Star (November 1858); as quoted in Faces at the Bottom of the Well : The Permanence of Racism (1992) by Derrick Bell, p. 40 
1850s 
Context: We deem it a settled point that the destiny of the colored man is bound up with that of the white people of this country. … We are here, and here we are likely to be. To imagine that we shall ever be eradicated is absurd and ridiculous. We can be remodified, changed, assimilated, but never extinguished. We repeat, therefore, that we are here; and that this is our country; and the question for the philosophers and statesmen of the land ought to be, What principles should dictate the policy of the action toward us? We shall neither die out, nor be driven out; but shall go with this people, either as a testimony against them, or as an evidence in their favor throughout their generations.
                                    
                                        
                                        As quoted by Joe Romersa (c. 1992) 
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