Taking aim at racism

I was saddened Friday to learn Harper Lee had passed away.

One of my favorite literary characters in all of American literature is the main character in Lee’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, “To Kill a Mockingbird.”

Published in 1960, TKM is a study in courage. One of the key scenes in the novel — also memorialized in the movie starrring Gregory Peck — is when Atticus Finch, “nearly blind in his left eye,” takes aim and shoots a rabid dog in the street.

Lee’s intended symbolism is obvious: the mad dog represents institutional racism that has unfairly accused a handicapped black man of raping a white woman.

After killing the dog, Finch warns his young son, Jem: “Don’t you go near that dog, you understand? Don’t go near him, he’s just as dangerous dead as alive.”

Do you think Lee was sending a message to Jem’s generation? Email connie.post@coxinc.com

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