My Paschal’s Experience, in honor of MLK Jr.

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To everyone that know’s the name, Paschal’s Restaurant located in Atlanta, GA, they understand it to be a staple in Atlanta.  Paschal’s Restaurant has been around since the civil rights movement when Martin Luther King Jr. would organize at their dining room tables.  It is a restaurant that speaks to the core of Atlanta and the United States.   To me, Paschal’s Restaurant is so much more than that.

To explain more about this feeling, let me begin by addressing who I am.  I am a 35 year old caucasian female.  Raised around my father’s Italian mother, and my mother’s best friend, Ruby and her daughter Angelique.  At a young age I knew what it meant to be of a different culture.  I also was aware of, the oppression that came behind it.  They say, don’t speak on another person’s journey, as you know not.  Always speak from your own experiences, always from the heart.  Growing up, I was consumed by Hip Hop music and culture.  My favorite dance music has always been and will always be, Dancehall.

When you think about why you find your best friends in life, think about the bond that ties you.  Mine was music.  Most of my friends growing up did not look like me.  We connected through the music.  Yet, there were still things I needed to understand.    I remember being in a heated conversation about race and what my white privilege meant for me.  At 14 years old my best friend, Venice, brought me to tears because I would never truly understand what it meant like to feel the systematic oppression that was placed on people of color.  As I grew up I began to understand what she meant.

Over time I experienced being with my black friends, getting refused to use a bathroom for a sick friend, being pulled over for no reason by the police, and being escorted by military officers out of City Walk when Cash Money was performing.

No I didn’t walk everyday as an African American, but my whole life, I have been walking beside them.  Watching all the injustices unfold.  Decades after the Civil Rights movement, being Black in America was still a stigma.

I made it my purpose to break the stereotype of the “white” American.  I needed to show the better side of who we were.  Love was how I would lead.

One day, I decided to move to the mecca of music, ATL.  When I got to Atlanta, I had to get money as soon as possible.  Within a week, I had an interview.  Paschal’s Restaurant had called me to interview and I was so excited to be working downtown Atlanta.

When I researched Paschal’s restaurant online, I was intimidated.  Such a statue in the south, such a monumental name.  I hope I was good enough.  I was so excited to walk through those doors.  paschals2.jpg

When I got to the interview, tall Photos of Martin Luther King Jr. hung on the walls.   Every server and bartender was African American, and then there was me.   Blonde hair, blue eyes and ready to work.

I remember phone calls, while bartending at Paschal’s from elderly African American people asking me, so politely, if I was caucasian.  I would always smile, because my love for Paschals and Paschal’s love for me was exactly what Martin Luther King Jr. fought for.  Not only to coexist, but to treat each other as family.  To find our likeness and walk together.

To say I was accepted by Paschal’s was an understatement.  From the bartenders, servers, and kitchen staff, Paschal’s became my family and remains that way 4 years later.  mlkday.jpg

Everyone has experienced that place that you finally feel at “home”.  Home can mean many things to many people.  But my feeling of home comes from a place, that has always seemed to be a monument in my life, even before I knew it existed.  

So today, as I sit in my favorite spot, at my home away from home, I can’t help but remember the great words of MLK Jr.

“People fail to get along because they fear each other; they fear each other because they don’t know each other; they don’t know each other because they have not communicated with each other.” – Martin Luther King Jr.

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