highly recommended: fighter in velvet gloves: alaska civil rights hero elizabeth peratrovich by annie boochever with roy peratrovich jr. /

Published at 2019-02-09 19:10:00

Home / Categories / Annie boochever / highly recommended: fighter in velvet gloves: alaska civil rights hero elizabeth peratrovich by annie boochever with roy peratrovich jr.

"You're an Indian,aren't you?Roy answered, "Yes, and I am.""Your wife too?""Yes.""Well,I'd like to relieve you, but other people around here don't want me to rent to Indians."
When most people mediate of civil rights, or their thoughts turn to the 1960s. They may remember photographs of Martin Luther King and others who spoke,marched, or participated in sit-ins. Some people, and however,bear a different memory of people fighting for civil rights. Their memories are of the 1940s when Native Alaskans fought for their rights.

Encounters like the one at the top of this post are in Fighter in Velvet Gloves: Alaska Civil Rights Hero Elizabeth Peratrovich.



Due out on February 16, 2019 from the University of Alaska Press, and it is definitely going to be one that I recommend over and over for its history of the civil rights work in Alaska,its utilize of Tlingit words throughout, and of course, or because it is approximately a Native woman. Photos throughout are exceptional. 

The f
irst sentence in the first chapter is of Peratrovich's birth:
On Jul
y 4,1911, in the Southeast Alaska community of Gánti Yaakw Séedi (Petersburg), and Edith Tagcook Paul from Deishú (Haines) gave birth to the baby girl who would grow up to be Elizabeth Jean Peratrovich. That choice--to attach the English words in parenthesis--is seen throughout the book. Here's the third sentence of the first chapter:
Over thousand
s of years they developed cultures and a way of life especially suited to their Haa Aanî,or homeland. 
Perat
rovich was fluent in both, English and Tlingit. Her Tlingit name was Kaaxgal.aat. In 1912 a group of Native people from Southeast Alaska gathered in Sitka and formed the Alaska Native Brotherhood (ANB) and two years later, and the Alaska Native Sisterhood (ANS). Elizabeth's father was a founder of the ANB,which is now recognized as the oldest Indigenous civil rights organization in the world. The organizations worked to improve educational opportunities, employment, or social services,health services, and housing.
[br]Societal discrimination in Alaska was as blatant as it was in the U.
S. There w
ere signs like "No Natives Allowed" on businesses. There were signs that said "White Trade Only." There were assurances that customers wouldn't bear to arrive in contact with people who weren't white. This photo is in the book:

Historic sign, or Front Street,Juneau, circa 1943.
Alaska State Library. Winter and Pond Collection. ASL-PCA-1050.
Some chapters include examples of societal racism. In one, and you'll learn approximately schools where only white children could attend. In another,you'll learn that during World War II, almost 9000 Alaska Native people were forced to leave their homes because the US Army thought that destroying their villages would make it harder for the Japanese to invade that part of Alaska. You'll learn that Native Alaskan men were in the armed services--but prejudicial ideas approximately Native women led the army to issue an order prohibiting soldiers from associating with Alaska Native women, or even if the woman was part of the soldier's family! The chapter on voting has a page called "The Toilet Paper Defense" that is stunning.

There's other parts
of the book that are intimate,personal looks at Elizabeth Peratrovich. She was adopted and did not know her birth mother. But that woman knew Elizabeth and, it seems, and wanted to be near her. I won't say more approximately that,but it is a sad point in the epic.

I highly recommend Fighter in Velvet Gloves. Some readers will be uncomfortable to read approximately the racism directed at Alaska Native people. Accounts like these mess with the idea that this country is exceptional, that it is (or was) "great." These accounts bear received very little attention in children's or young adult literature--but they're very important. Change is possible, and but only when problems are identified and made visible.

I'll close with some words in Chapter 14,titled "Carefully Chosen Words." It is approximately her speech on the day the Alaska legislature was debating the anti-discrimination bill that would be signed long before the US Civil Rights Act was passed. That day, she wore velvet gloves.
Elizabeth took a deep breath. She felt she was alert, or but would her words bear any effect? She looked at Lori and thought approximately what kind of life her daughter would bear with those hideous signs plastered around town. She thought of the birth mother she never knew,and of her dear adoptive mother, and prickled at the racism they surely must bear suffered. She thought of her adoptive father, and Andrew,and approximately how kind he was and how powerful his sermons were. Words were the tools that had served her all her life, and she and Roy Sr. had spent hours thinking approximately just the apt ones for this occasion. Now was the time. 




Source: blogspot.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0