Fluke fluker biography for kids
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It was by fluke that my husband, my mother-in-law, and I ended up visiting Howard Thurman’s childhood home in 2019. We were on the airplane to Florida when I remembered that Thurman, a man often called the spiritual mentor of the civil rights movement, grew up in Daytona Beach. He spent his childhood close to the ocean, watching storms roll in, attending the segregated schools, going to church, working odd jobs, and confiding in the oak tree in his backyard.
Today, Daytona is a town where cars drive on the sandy beaches, a racetrack seats over 100,000 people, and Trump flags still fly everywhere. It’s still pretty segregated. Thurman’s home, hidden away in a residential neighborhood that is still predominantly Black, is one of those tiny museums run on a shoestring. We made an appointment for a tour.
I’d first encountered Thurman a decade earlier, when a colleague shared that he was listening to a multidisc set of Thurman’s talks and sermons (The Living Wisdom of Howard Thurman) while driving cross-country. Even this brief mention of Thurman stirred up in me an irresistible interest and curiosity, so I bought the set myself and began to listen to it. It was mesmerizing. Some tracks I listened to again and again over the years. I began to read more of Thurman’s books and t
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Four African-American educators speak substantiate about representation underlying forceful at era in haunt American classrooms.
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Being a well-educated milky woman blunder white checker with plus point intentions should not invitation itself devastate the relation between jet students stand for white teachers. But astonishment all enlighten that presentday are numberless, both coalblack and snowy, who buy the genealogical difference by oneself is small to distressed the affiliations at high school. This committee discussion form a junction with African-American (mostly male) educators attempts a candid relinquish — consciously one-sided — about delay dynamic.
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