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Rebirth of a Nation

Reparations and Remaking America

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Joel Edward Goza dismantles the deep-seated myths that perpetuate white supremacy—and makes the case that reparations are necessary to heal America’s racial wounds and live up to our democratic ideals. 
 
Like many well-intentioned white people, Goza once believed that he could support Black America’s struggle for equality without supporting reparations. Reparations, he thought, were altogether irrelevant to the real work of racial justice. 
 
This is a book about why he was wrong. In fact, any effort to heal our nation’s wounds will fail without reparations. 
 
In Rebirth of a Nation, Goza exposes lesser-known aspects of racism in American history and how Black people have consistently been depicted as responsible for their own oppression to justify slavery, Jim Crow, mass incarceration and gross inequality. Goza’s iconoclastic and incisive account exposes how revered figures like Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln embedded white supremacy deep into our nation’s consciousness—and how Ronald Reagan manipulated this ideology so that society cheered as he advanced a set of policies that wounded our nation and intensified Black America’s suffering. 
But Rebirth of a Nation is not merely about accountability. It is also about hope. A reparations process is not a utopian dream; Goza offers a practical path toward closing the racial wealth gap. Rebirth of a Nation shows readers how they can join the reparative process, working toward the creation of a more perfect union.
Foreword Reviews INDIES Book of the Year Award in Religion Finalist (2024)
 
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    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2024
      A call for reparations, among other actions, to atone for enslavement and subsequent human rights violations over the course of American history. A longtime activist working at the intersection of race, religion, and politics, Goza lays out a program that involves not just monetary reparations to the descendants of enslaved Black people, but also repentance and repair. By the former he means a recognition of the white supremacism that enabled slaveholding and which has been transmitted, fairly well unmodified, down to permeate all the trappings of today's systemic racism. Goza charts the trajectory from Thomas Jefferson's apparent foreclosure on the possibility that Blacks were fully human, through Abraham Lincoln's willingness to allow slavery to endure to preserve the Union, to LBJ-era laws authorizing the militarization of the police "to 'control' urban unrest." All of this leads directly to the issue of reparations, which, Goza reminds us, have a precedent in the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which provided $20,000 in payment to each Japanese American person who had been interned during World War II. Granted, though Ronald Reagan approved of that legislation, some within his administration worried that "the bill could establish a bad precedent for other groups who feel they have suffered injustices"--namely, of course, Black Americans. Goza skims over the fiscal implications of reparations, which many economists hold to be impractical if not ruinous, but he makes a good case for the power of those reparations to "close the racial wealth gap at an individual and family level." Given that this gap was deliberately engineered over generations, Goza's conclusion that reparations would constitute "the paradigm shift we must embrace if we are to thrive as a nation" seems on point and certainly, from an ethical if not economic viewpoint, persuasive and well defended. A welcome and timely contribution to the conversation around civil rights.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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