Sissie: A Novel
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Sissie Joplin is dying, and her surviving children have come to say good-bye. Estranged from their mother for years, Iris and Ralph have both achieved success—Iris as a jazz singer in Europe and Ralph as a playwright—but the pain of their youth remains forever alive in their memories.
Sissie, too, remembers: the bitter struggles and the devastating tragedies; the indignities, cruelties, and deprivations visited upon a strong-willed black woman—and on the once proud men in her life ultimately defeated by a white society that at times seemed devoted to their destruction. Sissie was not always wise or fair, and her actions often did more harm than good, but she survived. And now, at the end of her life, it is time for a reckoning—and one last opportunity to heal.
A powerfully affecting family saga and a provocative indictment of racism in America, Sissie is a magnificent achievement by John A. Williams, the award-winning author heralded by Ishmael Reed as “the best African American writer of the century.”
John A. Williams
John A. Williams (1925–2015) was born near Jackson, Mississippi, and raised in Syracuse, New York. The author of more than twenty works of fiction and nonfiction, including the groundbreaking and critically acclaimed novels The Man Who Cried I Am and Captain Blackman, he has been heralded by the critic James L. de Jongh as “arguably the finest Afro-American novelist of his generation.” A contributor to the Chicago Defender, the New York Times, and the Los Angeles Times, among many other publications, Williams edited the periodic anthology Amistad and served as the African correspondent for Newsweek and the European correspondent for Ebony and Jet. A longtime professor of English and journalism, Williams retired from Rutgers University as the Paul Robeson Distinguished Professor of English in 1994. His numerous honors include two American Book Awards, the Syracuse University Centennial Medal for Outstanding Achievement, and the National Institute of Arts and Letters Award.
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Sissie - John A. Williams
Introduction
Since Sissie was first published in 1963, much has been written about the Negro family in America. What has gained the greatest credence, it seems to me, are the conclusions drawn from the Moynihan Report. It is somehow consistently American that the conclusions reached by a host of black social scientists over better than a third of a century, should be completely ignored in favor of a white social scientist—whose opinions remain arguable.
That black people in this nation have been capable of maintaining any family structure at all is so incredible a feat that it cannot yet be measured. The centuries of slave trade and slavery, if they were to be profitable to the fullest degree, as well as effective, did not dare to sustain the tribe, the group, the family. They were systematically destroyed except in rare, very rare cases. In such an atmosphere I would think that the instinct to be a part of or to raise a family would have been bred out, beaten out, slaved out, but it was not.
I came to this knowledge as a young man and for a long time I wanted to sing of this triumph, for that is precisely what it is. In those instances where we have not quite resecured the triumph of a family system, we are being charged by the ignorant and the bigot, scientifically oriented or not, for living according to the behavior patterns with which he tried to inculcate us. From late in the fifteenth century to past the middle of the nineteenth century, he severed families, took children from mothers, sent mothers and fathers to the tobacco and cotton fields and then bred black people in the same manner as he bred his cattle or horses. In just over one century the black American family, still tattered and battered, has come back. That human triumph cannot be sung loudly enough.
When I began to write Sissie in 1960 I was also aware of the terrible cost that had come with the remaking of a family life. There really is no way to measure the psychic damage of putting back together a family unit in one quarter of the time it took to make its destruction commonplace. This too I wanted to tell.
Survival has always been the main business of black families on these shores; that hasn’t changed much in all the centuries. Survival depends on the conditions in the environment and how one adapts to them; that is clear and elemental. The least of the animals instinctively understands this challenge to its life. The American environment for many reasons, all firmly intertwined, is hostile to black people. I believed that in 1960 and I believe it today.
It is true that black families no longer are being physically torn apart, but the economic grip on black life might just as well be physical; the result, separation, is the same. No black father who believes himself to be a man can remain in or as head of a family group without supporting it. To remain without functioning is to suffer the loss of manhood or, if you will, economic castration. To the extent that America’s economic structure most directly affects the black family, the national hostility has become subtle, the blame unclaimed. But Negro fathers in the mold of Big Ralph are growing rare in the sense that the highest value has been placed anew on strengthening the black family. Black fathers now understand what has happened and what is happening to them and they are not reacting in the old ways. Awareness often breeds the desire for change. The fact that there are almost one million black youngsters in institutions of higher education today means things have changed and mainly in the family. It is the family, mother and father, from which the impetus originates.
Yesterday black women, even in the cauldron of slavery, were the beneficiaries of whatever leniency existed. There is little doubt that that leniency was rooted in sex. Almost 40 per cent of the half million free
Negroes in 1850 were mulatto; about 10 per cent of the four million slaves in the U.S. at the start of the Civil War were mulatto and these, obviously, were not the result of sexual unions between black men and white women.
Now, I am told both directly and indirectly that a growing number of liberal
white people are tired of reading and hearing such statistics, but the fact is that the ramifications of these statistics contributed to the destruction of the black family, part and parcel with democratic capitalism, and must be reiterated if white as well as black are to be free. The white man and his social system, his life style, created the image of the black matriarch, the woman who runs the house in the absence, real or psychological, of the man. Sissie could not be such a stern, sexless, humorless creature. She is vengeful, cunning, and often a fool. She is human and the white image of the matriarch was not. Besides, I’ve known no black female head of a house who did not bemoan the absence of the male, and not for sex alone, but to provide the necessary discipline for raising black children in the society.
It is white America that is now faced with the problem of a real matriarchy in its growing suburbs in which the male is seen only late at night and on weekends.
As for Sissie’s children, as all black children, they learn well their lesson of the inherent dangers in white America. But in the learning they are charged to rebel against their condition and to challenge even their parents. Parents who are members of a minority group insist, often in subtle ways, that their children do what they could not do because of racial restrictions, achieve what they could not achieve in spite of those restrictions. Black parents are much like parents anywhere: They love their children as much as any others; they worry about them. But because they are black the parental burden is greater. With what sometimes appears to be unbearable cruelty, they train their children to survive and even function in the hostile society into which they’re born. In the loving then, there is hurt and in the hurting love.
The question of guilt because of survival and perhaps even success remains one of the uncharted areas of black life. To be black is to be forever embattled not only with the world of the whites, but with one’s self. How have I managed to survive more or less whole, without police record or motives filled with hatred or revenge? I think the black kids making demands on the administrations of the white schools they attend are troubled and perhaps somewhat guilty because they sit at Harvard or Colgate or Wisconsin, when millions of other blacks their same ages have no future at all to look forward to. This is not to say that many of those demands are not just, long overdue and quite within the framework of the society they wish to alter. It seems to me that guilt has been one of the spurs for the deed, but that, after all, is but one of the productive items guilt is capable of stimulating. We have asked combat soldiers who’ve survived the wars, we have asked inmates who outlived the concentration camps, about their guilt about surviving while corpses lay knee-deep around them. But we’ve not bothered to ask Negroes who are surviving the race war about their guilt. I wanted to examine the results of such an existence.
I also wanted to examine religion to some degree, for it has played a most treacherous role in the lives of black Americans, providing the great escape from reality. For Sissie’s generation religion was still meaningful; for her children it means nothing. So it must be for any people who do not find their own religion but have it given to them literally, on a silver platter. Ralph and Iris have no choice but to reject religion; it more than anything else made them see its hypocritical posture in both society and their mother. Religion has been, but decreasingly so, I believe, an important aspect of black life. Now black people are beginning to view it in much the same light as white people—as an institution with meaning for Sunday mostly.
Most of all in Sissie I suppose I wanted to stake out, so no one could misunderstand it, my claim and the claim of most black men to a decent life in these United States. Approximately seven or eight generations here should have served as something more than the mere establishing of squatter’s rights. But even squatters in some courts have legitimate claim to lands they settled and developed.
Finally, although it may not always appear so, I wished to offer a testimony of love to the members of my family, known and unknown, dead and living, good, bad or indifferent, black, white and red, and to say in some crude way (how could one even begin to say it with precision?) that I understand; that it has been hard, but fair, because that was the challenge, that was the way things were, and we accepted the challenge and still lived, though we were not expected to. Although guilt for living may drag at our feet, it is our physical presence that most causes our elation. And you could not feel guilt if you did not have a presence, if you were not alive and functioning.
John A. Williams
January 2, 1969
New York City
PART I
1
At last and finally! Iris thought when the plane sped away from Boston, where they had been forced to land because of fog in New York. Once more they were on their way, and Iris assumed that her brother Ralph, who was meeting her at the airport, must have been waiting for hours. Just my luck that we had to run into bad weather, Iris thought.
Beside her sat the woman she had met in the airport in Barcelona. For the moment Iris was too busy with her own thoughts to speak, and Helen Kessler respected her silence. Both of the women smoked cigarettes. Damn, it’s cold in here,
Iris said half aloud, when they were once more over New York. The plane seemed to slow, gradually losing momentum in the gray, and banked above the cottony storm clouds racing endlessly by. Iris took a deep breath and glanced at Helen. Here we go again.
Breasting the currents of air like a huge, stiff bird, the craft circled lower and lower. There was a sharp, high whine and Iris heard the massive wheels thud into place. The plane hung motionless for one frightening instant, and then hissed downward through the clouds.
Landings always make me nervous,
Helen whispered hurriedly, glancing at Iris’ taut, unlined brown neck.
I noticed that at London and at Boston,
Iris said. Relax. If it happens you’ll never know what hit you.
Unsure whether Iris was joking or not—she sometimes seemed a little strange—Helen glanced at her before replying. God, you’re cheerful,
she said.
Iris smiled briefly and turned back to the window, watched the plane right itself—slowly, majestically. Suddenly, much too suddenly, they were out of the gray, floating over a bay which seemed perilously near. Iris shut her eyes; when she opened them she saw gray asphalt hurtling by. Another slight jar and the plane had landed. Both women gasped with relief. Helen grinned sheepishly, Iris grimly. Damn,
Iris said, trying to restrain the fluttering within her. We’re here.
She took out her compact, snapped it open and leaned her face toward the mirror.
You look all right,
Helen said, damn you.
Iris, laughing softly, closed the compact, and Helen recognized that this laughter—unlike Iris’ merriment on the long flight—was genuine. Thanks,
she said. I’m sure glad I met you—
It was Helen’s turn to laugh.
—no,
Iris said, suddenly realizing that she might have been too withdrawn during the trip. I mean it.
Their eyes met and Helen turned away shyly. At first sight Helen Kessler didn’t look more than twenty-two, but a second glance revealed the pouch of a double chin and thin, seared lines radiating from the corners of her eyes. She was a small woman, with dull brown hair. When she smiled, her cheeks dimpled. Iris figured she was in her middle thirties—Iris was thirty-two. Helen had a nice figure, Iris had observed at dinner the evening before in the London airport restaurant. She looked as if she might be French, but was really an American returning to New York. Her presence had helped quiet Iris’ apprehensions; Iris hadn’t been in America for thirteen years. Helen (and Iris was grateful for this) was only superficially like many American women Iris had met and known in Europe. Perhaps it was Helen’s size that saved her; she could never be loud nor brash nor vulgar. Only fiery, scintillating, risqué, or cute. She had seen Iris’ show only the week before at the Emporium, she had shyly explained at the Barcelona airport. People were always saying something like that, but it had been a surprise to discover that Helen was so nice.
Iris climbed down the ramp on wobbly legs. She and Helen followed the other passengers into the multicolored glass-and-chrome terminal. The building reminded her of those structures which had risen like full-blown giants while she and Harry were in Germany.
The line shuffled forward over the speckled black marble floor. Now there were more Americans visible, those who worked in the banklike building. They look so angry,
Helen said. Don’t you think so?
Iris was searching for her brother, but said, I guess they ought to.
And this made her recall the fact that Helen didn’t consider herself an American. The sound of the taxiing jets was muffled now; only the single-pitched scream of the blowing engines penetrated the area where she and the others waited, behind a white horizontal marker. Ten feet beyond, uniformed customs officers stood checking papers. Iris looked about her at the lines of people, and was reminded of the storefront of the disbursing office where every other Tuesday she and Ralph had gone to pick up their ration of government-issued surplus food during the Depression: tinned beef, dried prunes, grapefruit, wheat, oatmeal, apples, and everything marked with the telltale stamp. They had moved with the line smelling the rich aroma of the apples until they came to a halt at the white marker. There they had waited until the joking men behind the makeshift orange- and apple-crate counter had laughed and smoked their fill. An imperious, stiff-fingered summons, just like the one the officer at the small booth was now making, had started them shuttling forward again.
When they entered the customs room, Iris looked up and saw Ralph standing in the glass-enclosed terrace. He waved and she waved back, anxiously watching for a sign.
Is that your brother?
Helen asked.
That’s him,
Iris said with a sober smile. That’s my big brother.
Then Iris wondered who was meeting Helen. She almost asked but changed her mind, thinking Helen might be embarrassed.
Entertainer?
the customs officer asked with a polite smile. He held Iris’ passport in his hand which stated her profession quite plainly. Iris answered, Yes, I am.
The officer excused himself, passed beyond a series of slowly moving belts and entered a small office.
What’s that for?
Helen asked.
I think,
Iris said slowly, recalling what the musicians and entertainers had told her about America, narcotics.
She smiled bitterly. If you’re an entertainer and you’re colored you get the works—
Helen nodded. I thought so,
she said, compressing her lips. It’s too bad you had to come back. The bastards.
Iris turned and glanced up at her brother again. She held out her hands in an impulsive, supplicatory gesture and he signaled back, urging restraint. Iris nodded and looked at Helen. Since Barcelona she had had the feeling that Helen understood. Yes,
Iris said. It’s too bad.
After the officer had been gone twenty minutes, he returned smiling broadly. Sorry to keep you waiting.
Neither woman answered and he looked at them, puzzled. Helen Kessler went through customs without difficulty.
The two women walked through the turnstiles past the colored guards, Iris trying hard not to stare at them. Ralph came down the stairs. The look in his eyes told Iris that the laughter which came from her lips was not inappropriate. She threw herself into his arms. Ralph!
she said.
He grinned at her, "Goddamn, baby, you sure look good!" They kissed, broke apart, and smiled at each other. He kissed her again and grunted, "You look good!"
"Man, you lookin’ pretty fine yourself!"
They laughed, and then, their laughter dying, looked into each other’s eyes. Iris asked, How’s mother?
His head sagged slightly.
Oliver said she was holding her own. Fighting her way back.
Iris heaved a great sigh. Funny that he should have said fighting
because that was the way she had always pictured Sissie—never giving up, making small of whatever happened to her. The time she had had the tumor operation, they had gone to see her, and found her sitting up in bed examining the growth which she had preserved in a jar of formaldehyde.
Thank God, thank God,
Iris said.
It’s not over,
Ralph answered.
I know, but at least she’s fighting.
Arm in arm they walked together to where Helen was waiting.
This is Helen. My brother, Raph Joplin.
Ralph held out his hand and Helen’s reached out tentatively. Then they seemed to recognize something sympathetic in each other, and both smiled.
You wrote that play!
Helen said, surprised, turning from Iris and back to Ralph. Iris was laughing. "Why didn’t you tell me? Here I was ranting about how you had to see it, and it turns out your brother wrote it—"
God, it’s cold here,
Iris said, pulling the mink tighter around her.
"So you wrote Shadows on the Sun," Helen said to Ralph. What an illustrious family.
Ralph and Iris laughed. You’re making us feel very good,
Ralph said.
Iris, I feel like an ass,
Helen said, then, looking at Ralph, I’m sorry about your mother. I hope she’ll be all right.
Thank you,
Ralph said. Can we drop you off?
If it won’t be any bother.
They seemed, all of them, reluctant to move. Iris studied her brother. He reminded her of their father—tall, stooped, and thin of face, but less broad than Big Ralph. His hair was cropped. She remembered when he had worn it long, brushed into a pompadour and greased heavily. Like herself Ralph had their mother’s soft brown eyes. She kept thinking, over and over to herself—he’s made it.
Ralph had begun a study of his sister from the terrace, the very first moment he had seen her. She was tall for a woman; tallness ran in the family. She swung her body in a sort of swagger when she walked, held herself regally. She hadn’t changed much in two years. Even from a distance, he noticed the luster of her hair, twisted neatly into a French roll. Iris had the strong features of their mother, but her face was less broad. Her prominent cheekbones made her eyes seem to curve upward, giving her a catlike look.
The skycap signalled a cab and placed the bags inside. Ralph said in a low voice to Iris, You’ll notice that all the porters have quit the railroads and moved to the airports. Whenever Sam cuts out the end’s in sight.
The skycap moved back out of the way, glancing curiously at Iris.
He must think you’re Jo Baker,
Ralph said with a smile as he sat back in the car.
The taxi edged out onto the main highway and the driver accelerated.
How’s Adela?
Ralph asked.
I started to bring her,
Iris teased.
Why didn’t you?
Ralph said with a smile.
Iris said, Why would I bring a hamburger to what must be a banquet for you?
Helen glanced from brother to sister, then turned and kept her eyes on the landscape.
At one time,
Ralph said, I had an overwhelming taste for hamburgers. But now, being an old married man—
Adela had been one of Iris’ friends, a dark-haired, unusually slender Catalan with blue eyes. When Ralph was leaving Barcelona he had asked half-jokingly, Will you wait for me?
Adela had giggled and had looked at Iris. For months, Iris remembered, Adela had asked, When will your brother return to Spain?
Gently Iris said, You might have sent her a card at least. Two years and not a word.
I know.
Ralph ground out a cigarette beneath his feet. She was nice. Is she married?
Yes.
Oh,
he said, adding after a while, good.
He turned to stare past Helen at the traffic.
And how’s your wife? Your marriage? Are you happy?
Iris watched him as he turned toward her, smiling. Even before he spoke she knew what he was going to say.
I’m happy.
He opened his hands as if to say, What more can I say? "And