Nothing like sunshine a story in the aftermath of the MLK assassination /
Kamin, Ben.
Nothing like sunshine a story in the aftermath of the MLK assassination / Ben Kamin. - East Lansing, Mich. : Michigan State University Press, (c)2010. - 1 online resource (138 pages)
Includes bibliographical references.
Room B4 -- The ville, New Orleans, and prayer feathers -- Room 306 -- Memphis voices -- "What kind of country was that?" -- "I was protecting you, man" -- "Thank god we ain't what we was."
Rabbi Ben Kamin has written a definitive personal expression about race, coming of age in the 1960s, a forbidden friendship, and his personal love for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This is a story that spans a four-decade search for a lost high school chum, a deep misunderstanding, and a coming to terms with an America painfully evolving from the blood of MLK to the promise of Barack Obama. The book is a remembrance of Kamin's life at Cincinnati's notorious Woodward High School, a microcosm of the 1960s and of America itself, as well as detailing Kamin's search-for Clifton, for America, for the key to understanding what race relations really are in the United States. Simultaneously, it is the story of the emerging rabbi's search for the legacy of his spiritual mentor, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., taking Kamin from Cincinnati to Cleveland to Memphis to New Orleans and other points, and constantly bringing him home to his friend Clifton and "the heaving hallways" of that high school.
9781609172121 9781628961539
Kamin, Ben.
Fleetwood, Clifton.
Woodward High School (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Rabbis--United States--Biography.
African Americans--Relations with Jews.
African Americans--Civil rights--History--20th century.
Civil rights movements--History--United States--20th century.
Electronic Books.
BM755 / .N684 2010
Nothing like sunshine a story in the aftermath of the MLK assassination / Ben Kamin. - East Lansing, Mich. : Michigan State University Press, (c)2010. - 1 online resource (138 pages)
Includes bibliographical references.
Room B4 -- The ville, New Orleans, and prayer feathers -- Room 306 -- Memphis voices -- "What kind of country was that?" -- "I was protecting you, man" -- "Thank god we ain't what we was."
Rabbi Ben Kamin has written a definitive personal expression about race, coming of age in the 1960s, a forbidden friendship, and his personal love for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. This is a story that spans a four-decade search for a lost high school chum, a deep misunderstanding, and a coming to terms with an America painfully evolving from the blood of MLK to the promise of Barack Obama. The book is a remembrance of Kamin's life at Cincinnati's notorious Woodward High School, a microcosm of the 1960s and of America itself, as well as detailing Kamin's search-for Clifton, for America, for the key to understanding what race relations really are in the United States. Simultaneously, it is the story of the emerging rabbi's search for the legacy of his spiritual mentor, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., taking Kamin from Cincinnati to Cleveland to Memphis to New Orleans and other points, and constantly bringing him home to his friend Clifton and "the heaving hallways" of that high school.
9781609172121 9781628961539
Kamin, Ben.
Fleetwood, Clifton.
Woodward High School (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Rabbis--United States--Biography.
African Americans--Relations with Jews.
African Americans--Civil rights--History--20th century.
Civil rights movements--History--United States--20th century.
Electronic Books.
BM755 / .N684 2010