Jul
29, 2010 - Issue 386 |
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"I Read, Therefore I AM:" |
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A
community icon passed away last week. Dr. Dolores Nehemiah was a very
celebrated person in the They were the
Our
Authors Study Club, a literacy group founded in 1945 for the purpose
of promoting those blacks authors who were driving a reading renaissance
throughout the The Our Authors
Study Club encourages its members to read black authors and learn
the history as told by African and African American scholars, to refute
the incomplete history that was being chronicled about African Americans,
to know the new discoveries about the true role of blacks in American
history and to understand why black scholarship was important in not just
revising the history - but in correcting the history. Revisionist history
is often frowned upon because its how historical facts get twisted. But
books stay around for hundreds, even thousands, of years, and without
correction, they represent the documented time, word and perspective of
the time. Our Author Study Club, supporting the mantra that history
is to be studied and not just read, would later become affiliated with
the Association for the
Study of African American Life and History (ASALH), and would become
its Every author in
Even with the rise of “Street Lit” (erotic literature), she preferred to focus on the positive aspect of getting those who would not otherwise pick up a book to read something. I remember having a conversation with her about it. While she didn’t agree with the lack of substance the genre represented, she maintained her position that reading was the ultimate accomplishment here. “The habit of reading is more significant and many have to start somewhere. Readers always grow in their content.” I hadn’t thought of it that way. There was no such thing as a “bad book” to Dolores Nehemiah. Of course, we know better, but if your goal is to get people to read, then you come around to understanding that position. I read a study a decade ago that said that a majority of black high school children had never read a book (20% of black adults have never read a book). A quarter of black children didn’t even have a book in their home. Even today, it’s estimated a third of black households have less than a dozen books in their home. We have video (DVD) shelves, CD shelves, and video game shelves but no bookshelves. Literacy is an issue in our community. Several studies estimate that as high as 35% of ALL adults are functional illiterates (meaning they can work [function] in our society without being able to read above a second grade level). So where do you think African Americans fall in that equation? African American children are reading behind their peers in nearly every public school system in the nation, largely because they can’t (or don’t) read at home. We don’t turn off the televisions, the gameboys, the Ipods, the computers, the CD players. Dr. Nehemiah once operated a “bookmobile” called “the Traveling Book Nook,” to give books to children who didn’t have books in their homes, throughout the neighborhood. She gave books to adults too. I once heard her say, “How do you expect children to read if their parents don’t read. Children do what they see their parents do. If they’re parents don’t read, then they’re not going to read. It’s that simple.” She was right.
It is that simple. I try to read a book a month for the past ten years
because I wanted to have a different answer for Dr. Nehemiah when I saw
her again. I owe a personal debt of gratitude to Dr. Nehemiah, as the
Our Author Study Club hosted the biggest signing I had in Artist Charles Bibbs has a painting titled, “I Read, Therefore I am.” I agree with that and I believe Dr. Nehemiah “is” because of all the people she encouraged to read. We read, therefore she lives on. BlackCommentator.com Columnist, Dr. Anthony Asadullah Samad, PhD is a national columnist and author of Saving The Race: Empowerment Through Wisdom. His Website is AnthonySamad.com. Click here to contact Dr. Samad. |
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