Operation Breadbasket
Autor Martin L Deppeen Limba Engleză Paperback – feb 2017
Under the motto "Your Ministers Fight for Jobs and Rights," the program put bread on the tables of the city's African American families in the form of steady jobs. Deppe details how Breadbasket used the power of the pulpit to persuade businesses that sought black dollars to also employ a fair share of blacks. Though they favored negotiations, Breadbasket pastors also organized effective boycotts, as they did after one manager declared that he was "not about to let Negro preachers tell him what to do." Over six years, Breadbasket's efforts netted forty-five hundred jobs and sharply increased commerce involving black-owned businesses. Economic gains on Chicago's South Side amounted to $57.5 million annually by 1971. Deppe traces Breadbasket's history from its early "Don't Buy" campaigns through a string of achievements related to black employment and black-owned products, services, and businesses. To the emerging call for black power, Bread-basket offered a program that actually empowered the black community, helping it engage the mainstream economic powers on an equal footing. Deppe recounts plans for Breadbasket's national expansion; its sponsored business expos; and the Saturday Breadbasket gatherings, a hugely popular black-pride forum. Deppe shows how the program evolved in response to growing pains, changing alliances, and the King assassination. Breadbasket's rich history, as told here, offers a still-viable model for attaining economic justice today.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780820350479
ISBN-10: 0820350478
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 155 x 227 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: University of Georgia Press
ISBN-10: 0820350478
Pagini: 312
Dimensiuni: 155 x 227 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: University of Georgia Press
Notă biografică
MARTIN L. DEPPE is a retired United Methodist Church pastor in Chicago. He attended the first organizing meeting of Operation Breadbasket and worked with Breadbasket until its close.