No struggle, no progress

No struggle, no progress
About this book
Fuller has always believed that it is important for poor and working class Black people to gain access to the levers of power dictating their lives. He believes that those of us who are educated and resourceful have a moral and historical responsibility to help them, and that is what he has always tried to do. This belief propelled him in some of North Carolinas poorest communities in the 1960s and pushed him into the bush, mountains, and war-torn villages of Africa nearly a decade later.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL19988636W
Subjects
EducatorsCivil rightsSchool superintendentsAfrican American school superintendentsBlack powerEducational changeEducationAfrican AmericansBiographySchool superintendents and principalsAfrican americans, biographyEducators, united statesEducation, united statesAfrican americans, civil rights