| From the color of the faces in Sunday songs
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| To the hatred they raised all their youngsters on
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| Once upon a time in this country, long ago
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| She knew there was something wrong
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| Because the song said «Yellow, red, black and white
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| Every one precious in the path of Christ»
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| But what about the daughter of the woman cleaning their house?
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| Wasn’t, she a child they were singing about?
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| And if Jesus loves us, black and white skin
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| Why didn’t her white mother invite them in?
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| When did it become a room for no blacks to step in?
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| How did she already know not to ask the question?
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| Left lasting impressions
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| Adolescent’s comfort’s gone
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| She never thought things would ever change
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| But, she always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| Years later, she found herself Mississippi-bound to help
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| Stop the legalized lynching of Mr. Willie McGee;
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| But they couldn’t stop it, so they thought that they’d talk to the governor
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| about what happened
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| And say «We're tired of being used as an excuse to kill black men»
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| But the cops wouldn’t let 'em past
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| And these women, they struck 'em as uppity
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| So they hauled 'em all off to jail
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| And they called it protective custody
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| Then from her cell she heard her jailers grumbling about «outsiders»
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| When she called 'em out and said she was from the South, they shouted
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| «Why is a nice, Southern lady making trouble for the governor?»
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| She said, «I guess I’m not your type of lady, and I guess I’m not your type of
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| Southerner
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| But before you call me traitor, well it’s plain as just to say
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| I was a child in Mississippi but I’m ashamed of it today»
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| And all of a sudden I realized that I was on the other side
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| Imagine the world that you’re standing within
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| All of your neighbors and family friends
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| How would you cope, facing the fact
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| The flesh on their hands, was tainted with sin?
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| She faced this every day
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| People she saw on a regular basis
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| People she loved, in several cases
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| People she knew were incredibly racist
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| It was painful, but she never stopped loving them
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| Never stopped calling their names
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| And she never stopped being a Southern woman
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| And she never stopped fighting for change
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| And she saw that her struggle was in the tradition of ancestors never aware of
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| her
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| It continues today; |
| the soul of a Southerner, born of the other America
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| She always knew there was something wrong
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| What you win in the immediate battles is- is little compared to the effort you
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| put into it, but if you see that as a part of this total movement to build a
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| new world, you know what cathedral you’re building when you put your stone in
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| You do have a choice!
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| You don’t have to be a part of the world of the lynchers
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| You can… join the other America
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| There is another America! |