Last Friday, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act with Debbie Levy's new picture book, WE SHALL OVERCOME: THE STORY OF THE SONG. [Read the post here.]
Find it at IndieBound |
This week's Poetry Friday blogroll is brought to you by my friend and fellow Marylander Tabatha Yeatts-Lonske at The Opposite of Indifference. |
I began
gathering string on the life of this song years ago. “We Shall Overcome” and
issues related to “We Shall Overcome” kept popping up during research on other
books for young readers that I wrote—a book about bigotry, a biography of
Lyndon Johnson, and a book about the lives of enslaved people on southern
plantations. So I began filing my discoveries away.
Find it at Amazon. |
Find it at IndieBound. |
What went into
the file, especially early on, wasn’t specifically or only about the song “We
Shall Overcome.” In working on my children’s book about plantation slave life,
for example, I was captivated by first-person narratives of formerly enslaved
people describing their music. And I was struck by this observation by
Frederick Douglass, from his autobiography:
I have often been utterly astonished
. . . to find persons who could speak of the singing, among slaves, as evidence
of their contentment and happiness. It is impossible to conceive of a greater
mistake. Slaves sing most when they are most unhappy. The songs of the slave
represent the sorrows of his heart; and he is relieved by them, only as an
aching heart is relieved by tears.
The precise
words and tune of “We Shall Overcome” don’t date back to slavery days, but for
me there is an undeniable connection between this song, which has so frequently
been sung to embolden those fighting for justice and to comfort those who have
suffered, and the songs of which Frederick Douglass spoke. I found, and the
book chronicles, a history of voices upon voices singing songs that evolved
into “We Shall Overcome,” with people making changes in the lyrics and melodies
to suit their circumstances. I wanted to create a book that could reach even
the youngest readers, and put them in touch with the history of an activity they all know something about: singing.
What role does music play in your own
life? Do you listen to music when you’re writing?
I don’t listen
to music when I’m writing. (Do you?) I like quietness.
[AA: I’m with
you, Debbie. I love listening music, but find it too distracting when I’m writing.]
But music has
played a large role in my life. I’ve played piano since I was a little girl. I
don’t play well—I play worse now than I did as I child—and my sight reading of
music is abysmal. But having a piano in my life feels necessary. In this I know
I am influenced by my grandmother, Rose Salzberg, who was a piano teacher when
she was a young woman in Poland and Germany and whose playing in our home and
in her own home was a constant soundtrack in the life of our family here in
Maryland. Certain Chopin pieces, which were her favorites, bring me to tears.
Rose's Sheet Music (Courtesy of Debbie Levy) |
If musical
talent skipped a generation in my case, it did land squarely on my sons’
shoulders. My eldest is a jazz musician working in New York and abroad. My
youngest is a talented singer, although it’s not something he chose to make a
career of. It’s awfully sweet when they visit and the house is full of live
music again.
What was involved in tracing “We Shall
Overcome” back to its beginnings in slavery, but also in tracing its progress
in more recent history as the song spread around the world?
My research for
this 32-page picture book was as far-ranging as any research I’ve done, and
I’ve done a lot of research as a lawyer, editor, and writer. The sources range
from songbooks to academic studies; from decades of newspaper articles (here’s
a favorite headline from a 1967 New York
Times article: “Popularity of U.S. Rights Hymn Irks German Reds”) to liner
notes from LP records; from books about the civil rights movement to articles
about African American song traditions to interview transcripts.
Remember the
file I mentioned earlier, in which I started collecting the bits that helped me
conceive of and write this book? Another signature item that went into the file
was the text of Lyndon Baines Johnson’s speech in March 1965 urging passage of
the Voting Rights Act after Bloody Sunday in Selma, Alabama, in which he echoed
the words of the song:
What happened in Selma is
part of a far larger movement which reaches into every section and State of
America. It is the effort of American Negroes to secure for themselves the full
blessings of American life. Their cause must be our cause too. Because it is
not just Negroes, but really it is all of us, who must overcome the crippling
legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall overcome.
Then when I found
video of that speech and actually heard his distinctive twang saying these
words—very moving to me. (Here’s the text and the video: http://millercenter.org/president/speeches/detail/3386.)
One more tidbit:
before I started my research, I had no idea that “We Shall Overcome” has been
sung by schoolchildren in India for years. I believe that you are more likely
to find kids in a school in Mumbai who know this song, and who have sung it at
school assemblies, than if you go into a school in this country.
I loved your book THE YEAR OF GOODBYES,
which looks at early Nazi Germany through the eyes of your own Jewish family.
Threads of that book’s focus on history and human rights appear again in WE
SHALL OVERCOME. Do you have a personal connection to the song?
Thank you for
loving THE YEAR OF GOODBYES, Laura, which has a special place in my heart since
it’s about my mother. As for a personal connection to the song “We Shall
Overcome”—I have the same connection any other human has to a song with such
rich history, significance, and power. Maybe my response is sharpened by my
roots in a family that experienced persecution during the Nazi era. But you
know, a picture book is collaboration.
The illustrator of WE SHALL OVERCOME, Vanessa Brantley-Newton (http://oohlaladesignstudio.blogspot.com/), has distinct and personal memories of being subject to the injustices of segregation during her 1960s childhood, the types of injustices that gave rise to the use of the song as a civil rights anthem. Working on this book was a deeply personal experience for her. And the editor who first acquired the manuscript of this book—her roots are in India, and the song’s story resonated for her in part because of the connection she felt personally to the tradition of singing “We Shall Overcome” in that country’s schools.
The illustrator of WE SHALL OVERCOME, Vanessa Brantley-Newton (http://oohlaladesignstudio.blogspot.com/), has distinct and personal memories of being subject to the injustices of segregation during her 1960s childhood, the types of injustices that gave rise to the use of the song as a civil rights anthem. Working on this book was a deeply personal experience for her. And the editor who first acquired the manuscript of this book—her roots are in India, and the song’s story resonated for her in part because of the connection she felt personally to the tradition of singing “We Shall Overcome” in that country’s schools.
What are some ways that classroom
educators might use your book to introduce a unit on the American Civil Rights
movement?
I’d suggest that
educators begin with a kid-appropriate discussion of the type of injustices that
underlay the rise of “We Shall Overcome.” In my own interactions with young
students around this book, I have been finding that they don’t necessarily grasp
the notion of racial bigotry at first. (I don’t view this as a bad thing!) But
we do need to introduce them to this part of our history, which, as we adults
know, isn’t really a thing of the past.
So I like to begin
by talking about unfairness, with some “what if?” questions. What if . . . you couldn’t go to your
favorite park because of hair color? Had to sit apart in school or on bus or in
movies because you go to a different church—or don’t go to church? Couldn’t go to
the place where they serve the best ice cream in town because only blue people
can and you are orange?
They giggle, but they get it. And then I talk about how, not so long ago, restaurants could refuse
to serve you a meal if you were African American. I explain that, in those
days, if you were African American, if you were Mexican American—you could not
drink out of the same water fountains as white people in some parts of the
country. I share photographs of these and other segregationist practices. They
are pretty striking.
And I ask: if you were being treated so unfairly, or if
someone you loved were, how would you feel? We can agree that being
treating this unfairly could make you so angry and frustrated that you might
want to fight. But fighting with your fists could create even more problems for
you and it probably wouldn’t get you what you wanted.
We discuss other
ways to fight—not with your fists but with your brain. You could join with
others who are treated unfairly. You could tell everyone out in the world about
what was happening. You could march in protest. You could quietly, but firmly,
demand your rights.
Miami University Freedom Summer (Courtesy of Debbie Levy) |
I explain, again
showing photos, that this is exactly what African Americans, and others who
wanted to help fight the unfairness, did. They fought with their brains. And I
explain that there was another important way that people fought with their
brains. Yes, they marched, they sat in at lunch counters, they protested. But
they did something else.
Anti-segregation March (Courtesy of Debbie Levy) |
THEY SANG! We
talk about how singing shows the people who are treating you unfairly that you
are strong, that you are a human being, and that you will be heard. And if
inside you are feeling a little scared or sad, singing can give you courage and
can lift your spirits—especially if you’re singing with others.
I’d also encourage
educators to read the book aloud and, where the lyrics are excerpted, sing them.
I’d encourage them to go to the online sources listed in the back of the book
and on my website to hear the song being sung by different people, and in at
least one different language.
Once the
students have read the book and had discussions like the ones I’ve described, I
love to ask them to come up with new verses that would apply to their lives today,
in their schools or neighborhoods—and we sing them together.
Thanks for your
questions, Laura!
Thank you so
much for answering them, Debbie. I think you captured the heart of WE SHALL
OVERCOME with these words: “Singing shows the people who are treating you
unfairly that you are strong, that you are a human being, and that you will be
heard."
Debbie Levy is the author of the picture books We Shall Overcome: The Story of a Song
(2013); Dozer’s Run: A True Story of a
Dog and His Race (2014); the young adult novel Imperfect Spiral (2013); The
Year of Goodbyes: A True Story of Friendship, Family, and Farewells (2010);
and other books of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry for young people of all
ages. The Year of Goodbyes was a Kirkus
Best Book of 2010, a Parents’ Choice Award recipient, a VOYA Nonfiction Honor Book, and a Sydney Taylor Award Notable Book,
among other honors. We Shall Overcome has been named a 2014
Jane Addams Book Award Honor Book, a Bank Street College Best Book, and a 2014
Notable Social Studies Trade Book. www.debbielevybooks.com
I, like Debbie Levy, find a certain comfort in the fact that younger kids don't know of the segregation history of this country. Once kids get to the social media age where it seems that anything and everything is said out loud, I wonder if they will find it easier or harder to ignore the bigots because they do not have the background history? I always opt for more history, but I wonder if the rest of the world does...
ReplyDeleteLaura, I really enjoyed reading this. I always love learning about a writer's process and an idea becomes a book! Thanks for sharing this, and thanks to Debbie too!
ReplyDeleteWonderful to hear about the background process of the book, and the dedicated research (threads) over the years that make it so good, also about the illustrator's and the editor's connections. Thanks Laura for sharing this interview, and Debbie, for writing the story.
ReplyDeleteSuch a rich and thoughtful post - and the ideas about how to share this important history in the classroom are so well articulated. Thanks, Laura and Debbie, for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThe connection between song and story reminded me of Amandla: A Revolution in Four-Part Harmony (a movie about South Africa). If you haven't seen it, I'll bet you would like it.
ReplyDeleteI love that you have your grandmother's sheet music, Debbie. Thanks, Laura and Debbie!
Fascinating to read about all of her research! Can't wait to use this with REVOLUTION by Deborah Wiles.
ReplyDeleteSo interesting to learn how the book came together. Regarding the song, the quote from Frederick Douglass says it all. Thank you, Debbie and Laura.
ReplyDeleteSuch a rich and informative interview-- thank you to both of you!
ReplyDeleteHello there Laura, I actually borrowed this book from our library a few weeks back, and I can't wait to feature it for our current reading theme. If and when I do push through with the book feature, I shall definitely link up to this fascinating interview with Debbie. :)
ReplyDeleteLaura's blog posts get the best comments! Thanks to all for your thoughts; thanks to Laura for asking the questions.
ReplyDelete