His
Truth Is Marching On: John Lewis and the Power of Hope
by Jon Meacham (Author), John Lewis (Afterword)
Read or Download at: http://best.ebookcollection.space/?book=1984855026
An
intimate and revealing portrait of civil rights icon and longtime U.S.
congressman John Lewis, linking his life to the painful quest for justice in
America from the 1950s to the present—from the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of
The Soul of America
John Lewis, who at age
twenty-five marched in Selma, Alabama, and was beaten on the Edmund Pettus
Bridge, was a visionary and a man of faith. Drawing on decades of wide-ranging
interviews with Lewis, Jon Meacham writes of how this great-grandson of a slave
and son of an Alabama tenant farmer was inspired by the Bible and his teachers
in nonviolence, Reverend James Lawson and Martin Luther King, Jr., to put his
life on the line in the service of what Abraham Lincoln called “the better
angels of our nature.” From an early age, Lewis learned that nonviolence was
not only a tactic but a philosophy, a biblical imperative, and a transforming
reality. At the age of four, Lewis, ambitious to become a minister, practiced
by preaching to his family’s chickens. When his mother cooked one of the
chickens, the boy refused to eat it—his first act, he wryly recalled, of
nonviolent protest. Integral to Lewis’s commitment to bettering the nation was
his faith in humanity and in God—and an unshakable belief in the power of hope.
Meacham calls Lewis “as
important to the founding of a modern and multiethnic twentieth- and
twenty-first-century America as Thomas Jefferson and James Madison and Samuel
Adams were to the initial creation of the Republic itself in the eighteenth
century.” A believer in the injunction that one should love one's neighbor as
oneself, Lewis was arguably a saint in our time, risking limb and life to bear
witness for the powerless in the face of the powerful. In many ways he brought
a still-evolving nation closer to realizing its ideals, and his story offers
inspiration and illumination for Americans today who are working for social and
political change.
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