
Jemar Tisby’s ‘The Spirit of Justice,’ September is Black Reading Month
Season 53 Episode 33 | 24m 49sVideo has Closed Captions
“The Spirit of Justice” author Jemar Tisby and September is Black Reading Month.
New York Times bestselling author and historian Jemar Tisby’s book, “The Spirit of Justice: True Stories of Faith, Race and Resistance,” tells the untold stories of Black activists in the fight against racism. Plus, September is Black Reading Month. The observance’s co-founder Malik Yakini discusses its history and goals, along with literacy issues in this country.
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American Black Journal is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

Jemar Tisby’s ‘The Spirit of Justice,’ September is Black Reading Month
Season 53 Episode 33 | 24m 49sVideo has Closed Captions
New York Times bestselling author and historian Jemar Tisby’s book, “The Spirit of Justice: True Stories of Faith, Race and Resistance,” tells the untold stories of Black activists in the fight against racism. Plus, September is Black Reading Month. The observance’s co-founder Malik Yakini discusses its history and goals, along with literacy issues in this country.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipNew York Times bestselling author Jemar Tisby is here to talk about his new book, which examines the unsung heroes in the racial justice movement.
Plus, September is Black Reading Month.
We're gonna talk about the importance of reading books by African American writers.
Stay where you are, "American Black Journal" starts right now.
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(upbeat music) Welcome to "American Black Journal."
I'm your host, Stephen Henderson.
My first guest is a "New York Times" bestselling author and historian.
Jemar Tisby just released a new book that highlights the inspirational stories of unsung heroes in the fight for racial justice.
It's titled "The Spirit of Justice: True Stories of Faith, Race, and Resistance."
Tisby examines key figures who resisted racism in the name of their faith, but have often been minimized or forgotten in the teaching of black history.
I spoke with him about the book and how it presents a more thorough account of the racial justice movement.
Jemar Tisby, welcome to "American Black Journal."
- Thank you for having me.
Glad to be here.
- Yeah.
So let's start with the idea of "The Spirit of Justice."
I love part of the concept here, which is the connection between black activism and liberation, ideology and the church.
- Right.
- Where, of course, so much of that activism comes from.
Tell us about the inspiration for this book.
- Well, quick story.
It was December 9th, 2017.
It was the grand opening of the Mississippi Civil Rights Museum, and I was in attendance.
Myrlie Evers-Williams spoke there.
Of course, folks will remember, she is the spouse and widow of Medgar Evers, who was assassinated in front of their home in Jackson, Mississippi.
After her public remarks, she did a smaller press conference where I was able to actually record her comments.
Somebody asked her about how the 21st Century Justice Movement compared to the Civil Rights Movement, and she said, she's seeing things now she hoped she'd never see again.
And then she said she was weary, which, of course, at 84 years old, you're entitled to be weary.
But then she said something I'll never forget, she said, "But it's something about the spirit of justice."
And she said, "It makes you determined all over again."
And that stuck with me.
The spirit of justice is what I see happening throughout the black freedom struggle over the course of centuries.
- Yeah.
And really, Evers-Williams is one of the people you feature in the book, you feature several others as well.
Let's talk about her connection to the church and how her faith moves that activism.
- Yeah, Myrlie Evers-Williams was raised in a Christian household by church mamas, basically, and aunties.
And she took that with her.
And it is really what guided her, especially in the aftermath of her husband's assassination.
She actually had suicidal ideation and she said, "Something prevented me."
And she said, "I'm sure it was God."
And then, throughout her lifetime of activism, and it's important that we remember people like Myrlie Evers-Williams, Coretta Scott King, and others as activists in their own right, not simply the spouses of activists.
So throughout her life of activism, she said she would ask God for guidance and for wisdom to help her know the right thing to do.
- Yeah, yeah.
Let talk about some of the other folks in the book.
There's a lot of people in here that, again, not everybody is familiar with or remembers as well as they should.
- That's right.
I profile over 50 different figures of black history, how faith motivated them toward activism.
One of my favorite ones is more contemporary, and it's Sister Thea Bowman.
She was a Catholic sister.
She died tragically young in 1990 from cancer.
But she was known for her beautiful singing voice.
And she was born and raised in Mississippi.
And went to a Catholic school and then became a nun.
And within the Catholic church, she became this outspoken advocate for racial reconciliation and also a black-centered Catholic church parish expression.
She had this magnetic personality, and you can even see it in pictures, there's almost this inner glow about her.
You cannot help but like her.
And she's one of those people where it was like, if you could talk to anyone living or dead, who would it be?
One of them for me would be Sister Thea Bowman.
- Yeah, yeah.
So, a lot of what's in this book and the profiles you create of these important people are things that our kids are not getting.
What's happening with education in this country, that this is not part of how we teach history?
- This history is subversive to some.
Because according to one narrative, the United States is nothing but a story of perpetual, if gradual, progress.
In all areas, but especially race.
And people want to leave the past in the past, as if the past doesn't exert an influence on the present.
And so it disrupts this narrative that the United States is this nation that had its issues before, but is mostly over them now and we're largely post-racial.
That's what some want to believe.
Learning this history of the black freedom struggle of faith in that movement helps us have a more colorful, nuanced, complete picture of it.
And it says, we still got a lot to work on.
So it draws attention to areas that some people would rather forget.
- Yeah, yeah.
Do you get that pushback sometimes?
- I get quite a bit of pushback because one of the things that we're dealing with now is white Christian nationalism.
And that is a ideology that wants to posit that the United States was founded as a Christian nation and that it was blessed and prospered according to how well we followed, what I would call, this very fundamentalist right-wing version of religion.
And we're going off the rails because we have all these others disrupting it, whether it be immigrants, or black people chanting black lives matter, or you name it.
And so I get the pushback because, number one, you've gotta point out the problem that white Christian nationalism doesn't look a lot like Christianity, at least according to Jesus.
And then, two, that there are these other people, like the black church tradition, that have a different way of believing this religion that is counter to that.
- Yeah, yeah.
You know, one of the other things that's really interesting in this collection is the spectrum of religious faith and belief that's represented here.
I think often when people think of African Americans, they think of faith and religion in a very kind of narrow bore way.
That it's all Baptist, for instance.
You demonstrate quite colorfully how broad that spectrum of belief and faith is.
- I mean, we came with religion, right?
- Yeah, right, (snickers).
- There was African spirituality that folks had early on.
And then, you know, many of them even were Christian in Africa prior to contact with North America.
And then we, black people did what we always do, is we take what's given to us and we remix it.
We add some seasoning to it and make it delicious, right?
And that's what we did with religion and especially Christianity.
So that even this religion that was coming from slaveholders and oppressors, black people heard a message of freedom in that and said, oh no, this applies to us in positive ways for our dignity, for our equality.
And then it, you know, it took on many different forms of the African Methodist Episcopal tradition, the flourishing of black Baptist traditions and, historically, black traditions after the Civil War.
Pentecostalism, Catholicism, it's all in there.
- Yeah, yeah.
It also strikes me that there's a connection between the discussion of this history and some of the arguments that we're having now about the importance of not just inclusion, but justice as it relates to inclusion.
That making sure that everybody has the right opportunities.
And that race is not something that's used to hold people back.
Understanding this history, understanding the role of faith and religion in that history, I think, powers the arguments that we're having over diversity and inclusion.
- You're absolutely right, especially in the political realm.
I think many people have the impression that the only way to engage in faith and politics looks like this right-wing fundamentalism, this white evangelicalism.
And what the black church tradition shows us is there's a completely different way of engaging in faith and politics that leads to expansion, and inclusion, and greater civil rights for all.
We have contemporary examples in people like Raphael Warnock, who literally breaches in the same pulpit that MLK did.
But we have so many historical examples too, like Fannie Lou Hamer, who was part of the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party.
Shirley Chisholm, who's run for the Democratic presidential nomination, paved the way for someone like Kamala Harris today.
And so one of the things I hope that "The Spirit of Justice" does as a book is widen the aperture of what we consider engaging faith and politics in a different way.
- Yeah, yeah.
At the same time, in some ways, faith and politics now seem more distant, I think, in many ways.
That there are lots of, you have a Raphael Warnock, but you also have people who are, I think, afraid a little to embrace that tradition and build on what came before them for fear that people won't relate.
- I'm glad you pointed that out.
I think, personally, this is really a weakness on the democratic side because there is this hesitance to talk about religion, the hesitance to talk about faith.
When, in reality, the vast majority of people in this country are people of faith of some sort or another, even if there is a rise of people who don't identify with any particular tradition.
Nevertheless, I think Tim Walz is a really powerful example.
Here you have a Midwestern white guy who's also a mainline Lutheran.
And we sort of forget about that group of people.
But the mainline Christian tradition is still very powerful, has been historically.
And he's demonstrating, as a living example, somebody who is a person of faith, but looks very different from a JD Vance, for example.
- Yeah.
- So I think Democrats should talk more about religion in the right kind of ways and not shy away from it.
- Yeah, yeah.
I wonder what you make of the possibility for the work that you're doing here with kids, with schools.
Is this the kind of material that we need in the curriculums of public schools and other places?
- We gotta have that Freedom Summer, Freedom School mindset about history.
Meaning, if we're not getting it in the traditional institutions, like schools, then we gotta get it somehow.
There's an initiative in Florida, after all the backlash they faced from their governor and his administration, to have this history taught in churches.
I think we need more of that, more social institutions, community institutions, that may not be your traditional school.
That being said, this should be taught.
And it's one of the constraints we have with standardized testing.
I used to be a sixth grade teacher and a middle school principal, so I know that pressure.
But we need this history, especially because it helps young people realize they have agency, and if they see a problem in our nation, they can do something about it.
- In case you didn't know, September is Black Reading Month.
And that's a time to celebrate literature, culture, and the written word as it relates to the African American experience.
This month, the community's encouraged to read books, magazines, and journals, all written by black authors, and to support black-owned bookstores.
I spoke with one of the co-founders of Black Reading Month, Malik Yakini, about the importance of the September observance.
Black Reading Month, something you co-founded.
Let's start with just the origin of that.
How'd you come up with this idea?
- Well, in 1978, '79, myself and my wife at the time, Inky Ruka Yakini and Dr Keith Dye had created a company called New Directions Information Institute.
And we were distributing black magazines and books, trying to get them in kind of mainstream stores throughout the city.
So we noticed that grocery stores, for example, at the checkout counter, there were various magazines, but none of the magazines dealt with the black experience.
Or those who dealt with the black experience, dealt with entertainment and issues like that.
There were no real serious black publications in the places where people went every day to shop.
So our attempt was to get those magazines and books in those kinds of stores.
And so for about two years we were distributing, going every month, dropping off magazines like "Black Enterprise" and "Africa Magazine" and others that dealt with serious issues of the day.
But when we came back at the end of the month, we noticed only one or two had sold.
So we realized that it was more than just getting access to the publications, we needed a public campaign in order to promote the importance of reading black books and magazines.
And so we met with a number of other black book distributors and black book sellers in Chicago with Third World Press in the summer of 1980.
And out of that, we decided to come back to Detroit and do something concrete.
There had been a lot of discussion on the national level about some kind of promotional campaign.
We decided to come back to Detroit and create Black Reading Month.
September as Black Reading Month.
We set it for September because that's the time when students are, at least at that time period, that's when students were going back to school.
I understand students are going back to school earlier now.
And also it was the peak book buying month in the book industry.
So we wanted to not only promote literacy, in general, we think it's important that people be literate and well-informed about what's going on both in their communities and the world, but, specifically, we wanted to promote familiarity with the black literary tradition so that we can, as a people, ground ourself in our own experience.
And have a window to look at the world which is informed by that legacy.
- Yeah, yeah.
And this is something that's celebrated in many different places now.
I mean, it's kind of an international phenomenon.
- Yeah, well, you know, especially with the advent of the information super highways, they used to call it, you know, people all around the country and around the world have become familiar with Black Reading Month and are celebrating it or observing it in various ways.
The most fundamental way that we ask people to celebrate or observe Black Reading Month is to read at least one book by a black author during the month of September.
That's kind of the low bar.
But at least one.
You know, and that might sound like it's not a big accomplishment, but the reality is in American society, the average adult has not read a book in the last five years.
And so we have a tremendous problem with literacy in general, but again, with black people in this country, people of African descent, we have the problem of living in a society which has intentionally kind of covered up our history, our culture.
And part of that is the tremendous contributions that we made to literature.
- Yeah, yeah.
You know, I think we'd be remiss to talk about reading and African Americans without talking about the linkage between literacy, and the word, and freedom.
And the idea of liberation, both in terms of resistance to slavery and to things like Jim Crow that came after it, but also in terms of just the idea of self-determination.
That bedrock is very rich with the ability to read and the proclivity to read, to understand, to know more, to know ourselves, and to know the world around us.
- Yeah, I don't think I could've said it better, Stephen.
In fact, maybe we'll hire you as a spokesperson for black reading.
(Stephen laughing) But our tagline has always been, black reading is crucial for black survival.
And it really speaks to what you're saying, both in the times that we were in chattel slavery, having access to the printed word and having access to the world of information that that opens up was certainly a liberating experience, and certainly something that our ancestors struggled for.
In the current time period, being well-informed is extremely important.
And especially in this age of misinformation and intentional disinformation, it's important that we're reading from multiple sources and that we're comparing that information and that we're thinking critically.
And that we're arriving at decisions which help to benefit ourselves as individuals, our families, and our community.
- Yeah.
You have an event coming up in September around this as well.
- Well, actually, we were trying to get an event nailed down.
We don't have it nailed down yet.
I wish I could give you the details.
But I would just encourage people to stay tuned to the September's Black Reading Month Facebook page for that potential Detroit event.
But the main thing is that we want people in their own homes.
Not so much, you know, we used to try to get people to come out to big public activities, but in their own homes, we want people to do a couple things.
One, as I said, to read at least one book during the month of September by a black author.
And then, two, for those who are up to it, we ask them to participate in the turn off the TV challenge.
That is to turn off the television for the entire month, except for shows like "American Black Journal."
- Except for "American Black Journal," of course.
- Yeah, no, but seriously, which speak to our experience and helped to uplift us.
But we're trying to break people from the habit of kind of mindless television watching.
And so the turn off the TV challenge during the month of September is really a fast of sorts.
It's a fast to break our addiction to television.
It's a fast that enables us to take the time that perhaps we were using watching television in the past, and use that to read.
And also, it's an exercise in self-discipline.
Fasting of any sort also always strengthens us and allows us to have the kind of fortitude to move through the challenges that we're facing in life.
- Yeah, yeah.
So before we go, gimme a suggestion for listeners.
The one book, if they might choose to read a book by an African American author this month?
- Well, there's so many books.
I can't narrow it down to one.
- Yeah.
- But what I'll say is I've been doing lots of family research over the last several months and finding out incredible things about my family right here in Detroit.
There's so much history that is still to be uncovered.
Much of it is out there, but it's in archives, and newspapers, and books, and so we have to dig to find it.
But one of the books I'm rereading is "Black Detroit" by Herb Boyd.
- Herb Boyd, yeah.
- I would strongly suggest that if people want to have an overview of the history of people of African scent descent in the city of Detroit, that that would be an excellent book to start with.
- Yeah, yeah.
- "Black Detroit" by Herb Boyd.
- Yeah, no, that's an excellent book.
And, of course, Herb's a great author and thinker.
I'm gonna suggest a book too.
It's a book that I just bought last week.
It's by a woman named Alice Randall, and it is about the history and linkage of country music to the African-American tradition.
The way in which country is ours, like all American music is ours.
- Absolutely, absolutely.
- It's a really wonderful book.
And it comes with an album of several African American artists' recording.
- You know, Beyonce now has kind of tapped into this- - Absolutely.
- So I'm sure there's a lot of interest in that now.
I'm sure people will be picking that book up to kind of see historically, 'cause people think that, some people think Beyonce is the first black artist to delve in that genre.
- Not quite, not quite.
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
All right, Malik Yakini, it's always great to- - Thank you, Stephen.
- See you.
Thanks so much for being with us on "American Black Journal."
- Thank you so much.
- That'll do it for us this week.
You can find out more about our guests at americanblackjournal.org.
And you can always connect with us on social media.
Take care, and we'll see you the next time.
(upbeat music) From Delta faucets to Behr paint, Masco Corporation is proud to deliver products that enhance the way consumers all over the world experience and enjoy their living spaces.
Masco, serving Michigan communities since 1929.
Support also provided by the Cynthia and Edsel Ford Fund for journalism at Detroit PBS.
- [Announcer] The DTE Foundation is a proud sponsor of Detroit PBS.
Through our giving, we are committed to meeting the needs of the communities we serve statewide to help ensure a bright and thriving future for all.
Learn more at dtefoundation.com.
Also brought to you by Nissan Foundation.
And viewers like you.
Thank you.
(upbeat music)
Historian Jemar Tisby discusses ‘The Spirit of Justice’
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S53 Ep33 | 12m 57s | Jemar Tisby's “The Spirit of Justice” explores link between activism and the Black church. (12m 57s)
September is Black Reading Month
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S53 Ep33 | 9m 6s | September is Black Reading Month encourages people to read books by Black authors. (9m 6s)
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American Black Journal is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS