who commit the crime of rape, are in the great majority
men who have had either no education or very little;
just as they are almost invariably men who own no
property; for the man who puts money by out of his
earnings, like the man who acquires education, is usually
lifted above mere brutal criminality. Of course
the best type of education for the colored man, taken
as a whole, is such education as is conferred in schools
like Hampton and Tuskegee; where the boys and girls,
the young men and young women, are trained industrially
as well as in the ordinary public school branches.
The graduates of these schools turn out well in the
great majority of cases, and hardly any of them become
criminals, while what little criminality there is never
takes the form of that brutal violence which invites
lynch law. Every graduate of these schools—and
for the matter of that every other colored man or
woman—who leads a life so useful and honorable
as to win the good will and respect of those whites
whose neighbor he or she is, thereby helps the whole
colored race as it can be helped in no other way; for
next to the negro himself, the man who can do most
to help the negro is his white neighbor who lives
near him; and our steady effort should be to better
the relations between the two. Great though the
benefit of these schools has been to their colored
pupils and to the colored people, it may well be questioned
whether the benefit, has not been at least as great
to the white people among whom these colored pupils
live after they graduate.
Be it remembered, furthermore, that the individuals
who, whether from folly, from evil temper, from greed
for office, or in a spirit of mere base demagogy,
indulge in the inflammatory and incendiary speeches
and writings which tend to arouse mobs and to bring
about lynching, not only thus excite the mob, but
also tend by what criminologists call “suggestion,”
greatly to increase the likelihood of a repetition
of the very crime against which they are inveighing.
When the mob is composed of the people of one race
and the man lynched is of another race, the men who
in their speeches and writings either excite or justify
the action tend, of course, to excite a bitter race
feeling and to cause the people of the opposite race
to lose sight of the abominable act of the criminal
himself; and in addition, by the prominence they give
to the hideous deed they undoubtedly tend to excite
in other brutal and depraved natures thoughts of committing
it. Swift, relentless, and orderly punishment
under the law is the only way by which criminality
of this type can permanently be supprest.