When slavery was abolished in the mid-19th century, many Minorities still felt inferior to Whites. Although, when some have an individual experience, feelings and attitudes towards people of color can change. White people will truly never know the struggles, because the caucasian race has never been discriminated against on that level. People of color are simply treated differently than the rest of society, and have been for years. White Americans can never fully understand, because white is the overall dominant race in America, and have always had superiority over the other races. Discrimination started way back in 1492, when Christopher Columbus met the Native Americans. Being a white male, he had never, ever seen someone colored like that before. His natural instinct was that he was better than them, and because his skin was white, and he was more cultured than them. He …show more content…
All throughout the book, we see Jim in a different way than most would portray a black man in the 1800s. Twain never talked bad about Jim, or made him out to be a bad person whatsoever. Readers are shown that although Jim is a black man, he is just like a white man on the inside, and that’s eventually what Huck sees too. Huck was a very naive boy, and he was brought up the believe that blacks were just property, and slaves were simply nothing. “It was fifteen minutes before I could work myself up to go and humble myself to a nigger; but I done it, and I warn't ever sorry for it afterwards, neither.” (In text citation). Even though Huck was young and was brought up by his Pap, a raging racist, he was still showing that he could be a little less racist than most at the time. He gets to know Jim, and sees him in a way he’d never seen a black man before. Jim became his friend, and Huck got to see who Jim really was, and that he was as much of a person as a white man