In the photo, Dorothy, who was 15 years old, sits alone, surrounded by white students who are smiling and laughing — but not with her, they were laughing at her. This picture was taken soon after schools in the United States were ordered to stop being separated by race, after the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision.
Dorothy faced constant bullying. When she walked through crowds of students and adults who were yelling at her:
People spat on her.
They threw rocks and trash at her.
She was teased and threatened.
But she never cried, never stopped, and never looked down.
She was the first Black student to step onto the grounds of Harry P. Harding High School. Her father told her:
“You are not less than anyone.”
But the people waiting for her didn’t believe that.
Crowds shouted mean things. Students spat. Adults threw stones and said hurtful words. Every step Dorothy took was against hate that wanted to crush her.
In the powerful photo, Dorothy sits among many white faces — all laughing, smirking, and sneering. Behind their smiles was deep hate. But in Dorothy’s eyes?
Strength. Calm. Fire.
She sat tall, looking ahead, strong and steady.
Dorothy Counts only went to that school for four days. Her family took her out after the threats and bullying got too bad. But those four days started a fire that could not be put out.
She walked alone — but she walked for thousands.
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