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Race Card Project starts international dialogue

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Two years ago, National Public Radio host and journalist Michelle Norris was embarking on a tour for her book about her family's racial secrets and wanted to find a way to engage and learn from her audiences. So she printed up postcards asking people to express their thoughts on race in just six words. Twelve thousand postcards later, the Race Card Project has created a new type of discussion about race in America. (AP photo)

She asked for just six words.

Michele Norris, the National Public Radio host, was starting a book tour for her memoir, which explored racial secrets. Sensing a change in the atmosphere after the election of the first black president, and searching for a new way to engage and listen, Norris printed 200 postcards asking people to express their thoughts on race in six words.

The first cards that trickled into her mailbox were from Norris’ friends and acquaintances. Then they started coming from strangers, from people who had not heard Norris speak, from other continents. The tour stopped; the cards did not:

“You know my race. NOT ME!”

“Chinese or American? Does it matter.”

Such declarations brought the Race Card Project to life.

“I thought I knew a lot about race,” says Norris, 51, an award-winning black journalist. “I realized how little I know through this project.”

Two years later, the cards have become almost a parallel career for Norris, best known for her work on NPR’s “All Things Considered.” She and an assistant have catalogued more than 12,000 submissions on www.theracecardproject.com. People now send them via Facebook and Twitter or type them directly into the website, leading to vibrant online discussions.

Many cannot resist accompanying their race cards with explanations, stories and personal experiences. Norris, in turn, feels compelled to contact them, listen to their stories and archive this conversation about race.

The discussion is inseparable from this moment, when the page of America’s racial history is in mid turn. Part of Norris’ inspiration came from a series of NPR interviews on race during Barack Obama’s ascent.

Eric Liu, an author and educator, heard about the Race Card Project from a friend. He calls it “brilliantly powerful” because of the strict brevity: “It forces this profundity that you wouldn’t get if you let people go on for two hours.”

That’s what happened one Sunday when Celeste Brown, a graduate student from Florida, noticed the Race Card Project on Twitter and typed “We aren’t all ‘Strong Black Women’ ” into her computer.

A fire was lit. Women and men of all ethnicities gathered at keyboards from Los Angeles to Ireland.

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Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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