These days, conservatives in school districts all across the country are looking to ban books that even come close to telling the story of our countryβs complicated history with race. But today, one of historyβs most important figures is out with a new childrenβs book which tells a story of racial reckoning in her own words.
Suggested Reading
βI Am Ruby Bridgesβ is a picture book for children ages 4 to 8. Bridgesβ words, along with illustrations by New York Times bestselling illustrator Nikkolas Smith, bring the story of a young girlsβ bravery to life for young readers.
In 1960, six-year-old Ruby Bridges was one of four Black students to integrate an all-white school district in New Orleans. Just six years earlier, in 1954, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional to segregate the countryβs public schools on the basis of race. And while several history books have covered the historic day, Bridgesβ unique first-hand account is unlike anything weβve seen before. βItβs a true reflection of what happened through my own eyes,β Bridges told the AP in an interview.
The image of Bridges being escorted to school by federal marshals on her first day as white onlookers jeered was made famous by the 1964 Norman Rockwell painting, βThe Problem We All Live With.β Bridges continued to face angry onlookers and white parents who pulled their children out of school until Bridges was the only student in her class. But Bridges told the AP that the kindness shown by her teacher, who she still considers a good friend, helped her get through what could have been an extremely dark period. βThat shaped me into a person that is not prejudiced at all. And I feel like that little girl is still inside of me, and thatβs itβs my calling to make sure kids understand that you canβt look at someone and judge them,β she said.
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