Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Ordinary Resurrections

Children in the Years of Hope

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
In a stirring departure from his earlier work, Jonathan Kozol has written his most personal and hopeful book to date, an energized and unexpected answer to the bleakness of Death at an Early Age, the prize-winning classic that he published more than 30 years ago.
Like his most recent book, Amazing Grace, this work also takes place in New York's South Bronx; but it is a markedly different book in mood and vantage point, because we see life this time through the eyes of children, not, as the author puts it, from the perspective of a grown-up man encumbered with a Harvard education. Here, too, we see devoted teachers in a good but underfunded public elementary school that manages, against all odds, to be a warm, inviting, and protective place; and we see the children also in the intimate religious setting of a church in which they are watched over by the vigilant grandmothers of the neighborhood and by a priest whose ministry is, first and foremost, to the very young.
A work of guarded optimism that avoids polemic and the fevered ideologies of partisan debate, Ordinary Resurrections is a book about the little miracles of stubbornly persistent innocence in children who are still unsoiled by the world and still can view their place within it without cynicism or despair. Sometimes playful, sometimes jubilantly funny, and sometimes profoundly sad, they're sensitive children, by and large — complex and morally insightful — and their ethical vitality denounces and subverts the racially charged labels that the world of grown-up expertise too frequently assigns to them.
The author's personal involvement with specific children deepens as the narrative evolves. A Jewish man, now 63 years old, he finds his own religious speculations growing interwoven with the moral and religious explorations of the children, some of whom have been his friends for nearly seven years. The children change, of course, from year to year as they learn more about the world; but the author is changed also by the generous and tender ways in which the children, step by step, unlock their secrets and unveil the mysteries of their belief to him.
Salvation in these stories comes not from the promises of politicians or the claims of sociology but from the ordinary resurrections that take place routinely in the hearts of children. "We all lie down," a theologian tells the author. "We all rise up. We do this every day." So, too, when given a fair chance, do many of the undervalued urban children of our nation. In this book, we see some beautiful children as they rise, and rise again.
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Levels

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 3, 2000
      A persistent voice of conscience, Kozol poses the question: do we want our schools to remain segregated and unequal? The National Book Award-winning education activist revisits Mott Haven, a poverty-stricken section of the South Bronx that was the setting for his two previous books, Amazing Grace and Savage Inequalities. The tone here is more optimistic, partly because his extended conversations and interactions with children take place not only at public elementary schools, but also at a supportive after-school center run by St. Ann's Church, a neighborhood Episcopalian congregation that reaches out to the hungry and homeless. Ranging in age from six to 12, all of the children in Kozol's empathetic, leisurely portraits are black or Hispanic; some know hunger; many have lost at least one relative to AIDS; a large number of them see their fathers only when they visit them in prison. Many have asthma or other severe respiratory problems, which Kozol blames on the high density of garbage facilities in the area and on a waste incinerator that was not shut down until 1998 after protests by community activists, environmentalists and doctors. His sensitive profiles highlight these kids' resilience, quiet tenacity, eagerness to learn and high spirits, as well as the teachers' remarkable dedication despite sharp cutbacks in personnel and services; overcrowded, decaying buildings; and crime-riddled streets. Yet as Kozol makes piercingly clear, the students' "ordinary resurrections" can only go so far amid what he calls "apartheid education," a racially and economically segregated school system that in effect assigns disadvantaged children to constricted destinies. Major ad/promo; 11-city author tour.

    • School Library Journal

      August 4, 2000
      YA-With warmth and compassion, Kozol tells of his continued visits with the children who attend the after-school program at St. Ann's Episcopal Church in the racially segregated, impoverished South Bronx. Surrounded by drugs and violence, these youngsters hold on to their optimism and innocence. Elio, described as "somewhat timid, almost happy, and attempting to be brave" tells him that "I can hear God crying-when I do something bad." The children listen to the author as well, sensing when he is troubled and reassuring him. The program is run by Mother Martha, an Episcopal priest educated at Radcliffe and a former trial lawyer, who doggedly works the system for her children, and by the grandmothers of the neighborhood. Kozol is well aware of what the future holds for most of these kids and rails against the injustices. However, he mostly relishes his relationship with them. Teens will be enriched and inspired by their stories, which fracture the stereotypes of the nightly news.-Jane S. Drabkin, Potomac Community Library, Woodbridge, VA

      Copyright 2000 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2000
      Social critic Kozol is still writing about America's underclass of urban children and our school's failure to teach them. Unlike his classic first book, Death at an Early Age (1967), which critiqued the dysfunctional environments in which such children are forced to live, this book is a loosely organized narrative that movingly describes their inner strength and amazing resilience despite very difficult lives. Between 1997 and 1999, the author followed a handful of children attending two South Bronx public schools as well as an after-school program sponsored by an Episcopalian church. Kozol is especially supportive of the after-school program, which he feels should be studied and replicated by all public schools. The book consists of three interwoven strands: stories of the children and their interactions with teachers and families, changes in the author's personal life, and social criticism addressing such hot issues as public spending priorities, the failure of prisons (where many of the children visit their fathers), and jargon-filled educator conferences that neglect real problems. For most academic and public libraries-and required reading for future teachers.-Jack Forman, San Diego Mesa Coll. Lib.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from March 15, 2000
      Kozol has written about the South Bronx before, in "Savage Inequalities" (1991) and "Amazing Grace" (1996). But where those passionate screeds attacked the city of New York for the ways its schools and hospitals and public housing abuse and maltreat the children and adults of Mott Haven and other poor communities, here Kozol's focus is on the children themselves. "It's easy," he observes, "to forget how much of the existence of a seven-year-old child has to do with things that are not big at all. . . . . A narrow lens, I think, is often better than a wide one in discerning what a child's life is really like." This is Kozol's narrow lens, capturing conversations, primarily with children who attend the after-school program at St. Ann's Episcopal Church, but also with their parents and teachers, St. Ann's pastor, and the elderly neighborhood women who watch the after-school kids. This may be Kozol's most personal book: while he was celebrating the curiosity, joy, and generosity of the children of St. Ann's, he was dealing with the illnesses of his nonagenarian parents. Kozol retains his anger and contempt at the city's neglect of his small friends, but he takes a moment here to marvel at their silliness and sorrows, gentleness and bravery. ((Reviewed March 15, 2000))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2000, American Library Association.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:7.2
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:6

Loading