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The Hands of Peace: a Holocaust Survivor's Fight for Civil Rights in the American South

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1 of 1 copy available
Born in Hamburg in the 1930s, Marione Ingram survived the Holocaust in Nazi Germany, only to find when she came to the United States that racism was as pervasive in the American South as anti-Semitism was in Europe.
Moving first to New York and then to Washington, DC, Marione joined the burgeoning civil rights movement, protesting discrimination in housing, employment, education, and other aspects of life in the nation's capital, including the denial of voting rights. She was a volunteer in the legendary March on Washington, where Martin Luther King Jr. gave his iconic “I Have a Dream" speech, and she was an organizer of an extended sit-in to support the Mississippi Freedom Party.
In 1964, at the urging of civil rights leader Fannie Lou Hamer, Marione went south to Mississippi. There, she worked for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and taught African American youth at one of the country's controversial freedom schools. With her boldness came threats—white supremacists made ominous calls and left a blazing cross in front of her school—and an arrest and conviction. She narrowly escaped a three-month prison sentence.
As a white woman and a Holocaust escapee, Marione was perhaps the most unlikely of heroes in the American civil rights movement; and yet, her core belief in the equality of all people, regardless of race or religion, did not waver and she refused to be quieted, refused to accept bigotry.
This empowering, true story offers a rare up close view of the civil rights movement. It is a story of conviction and courage—a reminder of how far the rights movement has come and the progress that still needs to be made.
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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2015
      A victim of Nazi terror who became a Freedom Summer volunteer in rural Mississippi re-creates the conviction of the activists' early civil rights struggles. The author of an earlier memoir of her half-Jewish family's persecution in Germany during World War II (The Hands of War, 2013), Ingram focuses here on her experience in her 20s, when she was caught up in issues of social justice first in New York City and then in Washington, D.C., and Mississippi. Having been imbued by her atheist father with the "sacred and secular duty to oppose racism wherever [she] encountered it," Ingram was deeply troubled by the enormous chasm in inequality between blacks and whites in New York, where she lived and worked in her early 20s. Befriending African-Americans yet not allowed to take them to the same establishments or live in the same buildings, the author was outraged by the racial discrimination prevalent even among so-called enlightened people. With her new husband, Daniel, a Southern-born journalist of labor-relations law, she moved to Washington, D.C., and joined the local chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality. The group worked for the integration of institutions and against housing discrimination, which, as Ingram discovered, was the most pernicious form of racial inequality. As part of the circle of activists, she chronicles meeting many of the lights of the movement and working for the enormous success of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on Aug. 28, 1963. The next summer, on the bus back from the Democratic Convention in Atlantic City, Fannie Lou Hamer convinced the author she should go to rural Mississippi to register voters and start a Freedom School. Throughout this brief book, Ingram's anecdotes are charming, and her memories of a deeply traumatized rural South provide a significant, moving record. A freedom fighter's passionate memoir from the trenches.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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