Blog

The East Side Freedom Library Blog is intended to provide community members with outlets for their ideas, and provide space to expand on and be in conversation with the voices who are speaking with and through the Freedom Library. We hope you will stay in conversation with us through our Book Geek Shelf Talker Blog and Research, Experiences + Review Blog, and/or share your own thoughts, experiences, research and ideas on here through the submission form below. We appreciate your thoughts and engagement with our communities! 

On research, activities and reviews from the ESFL community

Transition Time at ESFL

Dear Sisters, Brothers, and Kin,

This is the final blog we will be writing for ESFL’s twice-monthly e-newsletter (if you’re not subscribed, you can sign up here). In the future you will be hearing from our new executive director, Saengmany Ratsabout. We know that ESFL will be in good hands, and we look forward to the new knowledge, experience, skills, and resources he will bring to this work. Our optimism has also been nourished by the commitment and follow through our Board members have manifested in this transition. The East Side Freedom Library is on solid ground. We have been invited to become emeritus members of the ESFL Board and to continue developing programs in our areas of expertise. We look forward to working with all of you.

As you can see from the list of upcoming events, we are not slowing down in our efforts to educate and inspire, to serve as a crossroads among our diverse neighbors, and to build community. Our upcoming programs range from learning about worker organizing to confront the scourge of wage theft to roller skating! We want to encourage you to join us, via Zoom and, on some occasions, in person, and add your stories to the conversations.

Like you, the East Side Freedom Library team is concerned about the upcoming elections. We know that access to the right to vote has been contested since the very birth of the United States. There have been waves of disenfranchisement and voter suppression, on the one hand, and campaigns for suffrage and voter registration, on the other. The current political climate is rife with all these elements, and more. The African American Registry and the East Side Freedom Library came together around the idea of working with young people in the East Metro, to educate them about this complex history, and to invite them to write and present short commentaries about how and why voting matters to them, their families, and their communities. Three deeply-grounded organizations—Urban Roots, Family Values for Life, and the Asian American Organizing Project—helped us recruit the youth. Best Buy’s sponsorship enabled us to compensate the youth and cover both organizations’ expenses.

As an historian with 40+ years of teaching experience, ESFL’s Peter Rachleff engaged the youth about historical background, and, as a veteran videographer with similarly extensive experience, the African American Registry’s Ben Mchie worked with the youth on their presentations and captured them on video. Both organizations, as well as our community partners, will be posting these videos on our websites, Facebook, You Tube, and Instagram pages, Twitter accounts, and more. Here is the eight and a half minute video. We hope you will find inspiration and hope in these young people. This, perhaps above all, is what makes us optimistic about the future.

Love and Solidarity,
Beth Cleary and Peter Rachleff
Co-Executive Directors Emeritus

The East Side Freedom Library would love to share your story about what it means to live during this pandemic. Please click 'Submit a Blog or Book Geek Shelf Talker' above to send your story.

Get Involved With Us

As we begin the new year, the East Side Freedom Library team wants to say loud and clear: We want you to get involved with us. Our mission to “inspire solidarity, work for justice, and advocate for equity for all” can get traction only when our audience members become...

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Meeting the Challenges

Dear Sisters, Brothers, and Kin, This has been quite a year for us all. While we are eager to leave 2020 behind and look with hope to 2021, this is also time to reflect on some of our accomplishments, some in spite of the pandemic, some because of the pandemic. We...

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Book Geek Shelf Talker: A’Lelia Bundles’ On Her Own Ground: The Life & Times of Madam C.J. Walker

By Carolyn Holbrook

A photo of "On Her Own Ground" book coverOn March 20, toward the end of Women’s History Month, Netflix premiered Self Made, a four-part mini series inspired by the life of Madam C.J. Walker, America’s first woman millionaire. It is so uncommon for historical television dramas to center black women who weren’t slaves that I was excited to tune in. I know about Madam Walker both from things I’ve heard and from her biography, On Her Own Ground: The Life & Times of Madam C.J. Walker  (Scribner, 2002) written by her great granddaughter, A’Lelia Bundles.

Rather than being inspired by the Self Made series, I was horrified as I watched this phenomenal woman be reduced to a greedy, thoughtless, jealous-hearted person invested in teaching black women to take the kink out of their hair in order to help them look more “acceptable.” It was also troubling to see her rival, Annie Turnbo Malone portrayed as a biracial villain who used her light skinned privilege to try to keep Walker from prospering and spent a lifetime trying to prove that Walker had stolen her invention. None of this is accurate. Filmmakers have license to reimagine the story of a life, but Self Made is a film that is laden with lies and worn out cliches that are so damaging to Black women.

Here’s the real story. Born Sarah Breedlove, Walker was the youngest child of formerly enslaved sharecroppers, the first in her family to be born after the Emancipation Proclamation. She was orphaned at the age of seven and worked as a washerwoman for much of her early life. Then, following an abusive marriage and wanting to provide her only daughter with a good education, she went to work for Annie Malone, selling hair care products Malone had invented to help black women who, like Sarah, struggled with hair loss due to poor hygiene, poor diet, scalp disease, and stress. Later, she created more products and, with her third husband, advertising expert C.J. Walker, built a hair care empire which she ran from 1905 until her death in 1919.    

Not only was Madam Walker a brilliant entrepreneur, she was also an educator and philanthropist. Through a factory and schools that she built, she educated young black women and created well paying jobs for them in St. Louis, Indianapolis, Denver, Louisiana, Mississippi, Seattle, New York and other cities. In addition, she forged alliances with Booker T. Washington, the conservative founder of the Tuskegee Institute and later became an avid political activist who worked with W.E.B. DuBois in anti-lynching efforts along with Mary McLeod Bethune, Mary Church Terrell and Ida B. Wells-Barnett.

Madam Walker and Annie Malone were definitely business rivals but both were deeply invested in improving black women’s health and well being. Their success with “hair growing” was a natural result of teaching women to take better care of their health. Further, Malone, a powerful and wealthy woman in her own right, was not biracial. Like Walker, she was a brown skinned woman born to former slaves. 

I have three daughters and five granddaughters and it is important to me that they know the ancestral women whose shoulders they stand on – women who succeeded in a variety of fields. Knowing how impressionable young people are, and knowing that most uninformed viewers (myself included) tend to take what they see at face value rather than taking note of the phrases “based on” or “inspired by,” I decided to find another copy of On Her Own Ground to share with my girls in order to ensure that they know the truth of who she really was. (There is an updated version of the book, retitled Self Made with a photo of Octavia Spencer as Madam Walker on the cover but I don’t trust that version. I fear that it might be skewed to perpetuate the story that is put forth in the film.)

I highly recommend that you find a copy of On Her Own Ground and set the record straight. Not only does the author discuss her great grandmother, Madam Walker, she also includes a ton of information about what was going on for black folks during that time in American history. 

A photo of Carolyn Holbrook

Find Your Book!

Need to get your hands on a good book while doing your work to shelter in place? The library is closed in a response of solidarity amid the COVID-19 crisis, but here are some places where you can get your hands on all the great titles. Shop independent bookstores!

Black Garnet Books: https://www.blackgarnetbooks.com
Boneshaker Books: https://www.boneshakerbooks.com/
Dream Haven Books and Comics: http://dreamhavenbooks.com/
Eat My Words: http://www.eatmywordsbooks.com/
Irreverent Bookworm: https://irrevbooks.com/
Magers & Quinn: https://www.magersandquinn.com/
Mayday Books: http://maydaybookstore.org/
Moon Palace Books: https://www.moonpalacebooks.com/
Next Chapter Booksellers: https://www.nextchapterbooksellers.com/
SubText Books: https://subtextbooks.com/books
The Red Balloon Bookshop: https://www.redballoonbookshop.com/
Wild Rumpus: https://www.wildrumpusbooks.com/

Or you could even consider the amazing Powell's in Portland: https://www.powells.com/; Book Shop, https://bookshop.org/; AbeBooks https://www.abebooks.com/; or Indie Bound, https://www.indiebound.org/

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Please email your blogs or Book Geek Shelf Talkers to Clarence White at [email protected].

Book Geek Shelf Talkers: Provide two or three paragraphs about the book and why the thoughts inside are important for you. How might they be important for us, especially in these days when we need to inspire more solidarity than ever?