Quotes about Race
The law is the witness and external deposit of our moral life. Its history is the history of the moral development of the race.
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
In all the relations of life and death, we are met by the color line.
- Frederick Douglass
Seeley was right when he said that "moral deterioration is bound to set in in any subject race".
- E Stanley Jones
A winter ago I had an after-school seminar for high-school students and in one of the early sessions Una, a brilliant fifteen-year-old, a born writer who came to Harlem from Panama five years ago, and only then discovered the conflict between races, asked me, Mrs. Franklin, do you really and truly believe in God with no doubts at all? Oh, Una, I really and truly believe in God with all kinds of doubts. But I base my life on this belief.
- Madeleine L'Engle
I believe in recognizing every human being as a human being--neither white, black, brown, or red; and when you are dealing with humanity as a family there's no question of integration or intermarriage. It's just one human being marrying another human being or one human being living around and with another human being.
- Malcolm X
But, as a heathen tells us, there is no nation so barbarous, no race so brutish, as not to be imbued with the conviction that there is a God.
- John Calvin
But, as a heathen tells us,[54] there is no nation so barbarous, no race so brutish, as not to be imbued with the conviction that there is a God.
- John Calvin
The Negro revolution is controlled by foxy white liberals, by the Government itself. But the Black Revolution is controlled only by God.
- Malcolm X
The history of our race, and each individual's experience, are sown thick with evidence that a truth is not hard to kill and that a lie told well is immortal.
- Mark Twain
I know of no rights of race superior to the rights of humanity...
- Frederick Douglass
Ever since history has been written, ever since philosophy has meditated, misery has been the garment of the human race.
- Victor Hugo
Marry—but whom, in the name of light and freedom? The daughters of his own race sold themselves to the Invaders; the daughters of the Invaders bought their husbands as they bought an opera-box. It ought all to have been transacted on the Stock Exchange.
- Edith Wharton