- Julius Lester
Julius Lester (born
January 27 1939 ), also known as "Julius Bernard Lester" or by hisHebrew name "Yaakov Daniel", is an award winning American author of books for children and adults, and was an occasionally controversial professor at theUniversity of Massachusetts at Amherst .Lester is
Black andJewish . He has recorded two albums offolk music .Biography
Early life and family
Lester, a
Methodist minister's son, was born inSt. Louis, Missouri to W. D. and Julia (Smith) Lester. In 1960 he received his BA fromFisk University .His first marriage to Joan Steinau lasted from 1962 to the couple's divorce in 1970 and produced two children: Jody Simone and Malcolm Coltrane. In 1979 he married Alida Carolyn Fechner, who had a daughter, Elena Milad; the couple had a son, David Julius. The marriage ended in 1991. In 1995 he married Milan Sabatini; his stepdaughter from this marriage is performance artist
Lián Amaris Sifuentes .Involvement in the civil rights movement
In the early 1960s, Lester became active in the American civil rights movement, first as a folk singer at numerous civil rights rallies and as part of the 1964
Mississippi Summer Project] . He later worked full time with SNCC (Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee ) and traveled toNorth Vietnam as a photographer to document the effects of theVietnam War . He co-wrote his first book withPete Seeger in 1965: "The 12-String Guitar as Played by Leadbelly: An Instructional Manual". He recorded two albums of traditional and original songs for Vanguard, "Julius Lester" (1966) and "Departures" (1967). A compilation of selections from both CDs has been released (2006) byAce Records inEngland .He has written 45 books for children and adults, dealing with
race relations and politics, including 1968's "Look Out, Whitey! Black Power's Gon' Get Your Mama!" As a radio announcer onNew York City 'sWBAI , Lester interviewed indiduals involved in a 1968United Federation of Teachers strike inBrooklyn 's Ocean Hill-Brownsville school district. The strike had greatly exacerbated the strain between theAfrican-American andJewish-American communities, and Lester may have contributed to that tension when he asked one involved man to read ananti-Semitic poem on the air.Conversion to Judaism
At the age of 9, Lester had learned that his maternal great-grandfather was a German
Jew named Altschul who lived inPine Bluff, Arkansas . (When the now-Jewish Lester attempted to contact members of the Altschul family 40 years later, he discovered that the Altschuls remaining in Pine Bluff had all converted toChristianity ).In 1982, Lester converted to Judaism, a process which he recounts in his second autobiography, "Lovesong." As a professor first of
Afro-American studies and later of Near-Eastern andJudaic studies , he has played a prominent role in the occasionally strained relationship betweenAfrican-American andJewish-American communities — a role defined by his earlier career as a radio announcer and his reputation ascivil rights activist.As an academic and a member of both communities, and before his retirement from public life, Lester spoke and wrote frequently on Black-Jewish relations. "The black assumption is that Jews are white people. And blacks don't understand that most Jews don't see themselves as white," he told an interviewer at "J." in 1996.
At the end of 2003 he retired from the University of Massachusetts where, in addition to Judaic Studies, he also taught one of the university's largest and most popular courses, "Social Change and the 1960s" in the History department.
Writing for children
In 1969, at the advice of an editor, Lester began writing for children with "To Be a Slave", a collection based on the oral histories of slaves. The book won the
Newbery Honor . Since then Lester has won many more commendations and awards for his work, which often focuses on the African-American experience. His books are frequently rooted infolklore , as with his "Tales of Uncle Remus: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit", or they reclaim parts of the post-colonialAfrica n experience, as with "Sam and the Tigers", a retelling of "Little Black Sambo ". He has also written the book "When Dad Killed Mom ", about two kids who have to deal with a dead mother who was killed by their psychologist father.Awards
Book awards
*
Newbery Honor , 1969, and Lewis Carroll Shelf Award, 1970, both for "To Be a Slave"
* Lewis Carroll Shelf Award, 1972, andNational Book Award finalist, 1973, both for "The Long Journey Home: Stories from Black History"
* Lewis Carroll Shelf Award, 1973, for "The Knee-high Man and Other Tales"
* Coretta Scott King honor, 1983, for "This Strange New Feeling", and 1988, for "Tales of Uncle Remus: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit"
* Parents' Choice Story Book award, 1987, for "The Tales of Uncle Remus", and 1990, for "Further Tales of Uncle Remus"
* Reading Magic Award, 1988, for "More Tales of Uncle Remus"
*Boston Globe-Horn Book Award ,American Library Association Notable Book, and Caldecott Honor, all 1995, all for "John Henry"
* ALA Notable Book, 1996, for "Sam and the Tigers".
*Coretta Scott King Award , 2006, for his novel "Day of Tears: A Novel in Dialogue".Other awards
* Distinguished Teacher's Award, 1983-84
* Faculty Fellowship Award for Distinguished Research and Scholarship, 1985
* National Professor of the Year Silver Medal Award, Council for Advancement and Support of Education, 1985
* Massachusetts State Professor of the Year and Gold Medal Award for National Professor of the Year, Council for Advancement and Support of Education, both 1986
* Distinguished Faculty Lecturer, 1986-87.References
* "Julius Lester." "Authors and Artists for Young Adults", Volume 51. Gale Group, 2003.
* Lester, Julius. "Lovesong: Becoming a Jew", 1988.
* Oppenheimer, Joel. "The Soul the Wanders", "The New York Times".January 31 ,1988 . [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=940DE7DC153AF932A05752C0A96E948260&sec=&pagewanted=print]
* Weisnstein, Natalie. "Julius Lester: There's no magic formula' for blacks and Jews," "J".February 16 ,1996 . [http://www.jewishsf.com/content/2-0-/module/displaystory/story_id/2972/format/print/edition_id/52/displaystory.print]External links
* [http://members.authorsguild.net/juliuslester/index.htm Official Site]
* [http://www.umass.edu/judaic/faculty/juliuslester.html University of Massachusetts faculty page on Lester]
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