Passion's Pride: Return to the Dawning

Passion's Pride: Return to the Dawning

by Cathie Wright-Lewis
Passion's Pride: Return to the Dawning

Passion's Pride: Return to the Dawning

by Cathie Wright-Lewis

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Overview

High School teacher Mecca Freeman has lost her faith. In people. In the future. In the promise of racial equality and understanding. But when she and her students witness the attack on the World Trade Center on 9/11, she begins a spiritual journey of discovery that opens her eyes to America's racist past. Mecca learns why her courageous mother Passion abandoned the fight for civil rights in Brooklyn and took her children out of the movement. And she finally understands the connection between the Twin Towers, symbols of American wealth and power, and the slave trade that led so many African slaves to their death and burial at the foot of the Towers.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940151300490
Publisher: Hard Ball Press
Publication date: 05/16/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 695 KB

About the Author

Author Cathie Wright-Lewis is a lover of linguistics, Ancient History, Education and Metaphysics. Simultaneously quenching her thirst for a daily dose of discourse with classic authors and molding young minds, she served the New York City public school system as a high school English teacher for 30 years.
A native of the Brownsville section of Brooklyn and a participant in the busing program to achieve racial integration during the sixties, she was exposed early in life to diverse cultures and dialects of the English Language. Cathie found the language, culture and political struggle intriguing. They all laid the foundation for her future as an educator, writer and activist.
Consequently, her first novel, Maurya’s Seed-why hope lives behind project walls in 2001, depicts Brooklyn’s explosive reaction to the murder of an innocent 9 year-old Black boy by the police in 1963, a chapter of the Civil Rights Era and its impact on education and the challenged people of inner city communities.
In 1993, 8 years before the horrific “9-11” terror attacks, Cathie wrote a poem entitled, “Terror at the Towers.” Serving as the basis for Passion’s Pride, the poem literally describes the towers crumbling, but not because of the Taliban; avenging the desecration of their graves are the very African captives who initially built the Wall Street community. Their bones are found beneath the buildings in the Wall Street area.
Although people of African descent have fought and won the right to memorialize some of the bones and construct The African Burial Ground Memorial, Ms. Wright-Lewis believes many more bones of African slaves and victims of 9-11 still exist at Ground Zero, and that constructing anything but a memorial at that site would be a sacrilege.
She continues to use the art of writing as activism for the rights of the voiceless.
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