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Dream Town
Dream Town: Shaker Heights and the Quest for Racial Equity | Laura Meckler
2 posts | 2 read | 5 to read
Nearly every community in America has confronted questions of race, integration, and equity. Few have made a name for themselves like Shaker Heights, Ohio. In this searing and deeply researched examination of the promises and realities of racial integration, award-winning Washington Post journalist Laura Meckler aims to uncover where the problem lies and to shed light on whats being done to move forwardin housing, in education, and in the promise of shared community. In the late 1950s, Shaker Heights became a national model for housing integration. And beginning in the seventies, it was known as a crown jewel in the national move to racially integrate schools. The school district built a national reputation for academic excellence and diversity, serving as a model for how white and Black Americans can not just coexist but thrive together. Mecklerherself a product of Shaker Heightstakes a deeper look into the place that shaped her, investigating its complicated history and its ongoing challenges in order to untangle the myth from the truth. She confronts an enduring, and troubling, questionif Shaker Heights has worked so hard at racial equity, why does a racial academic achievement gap persist? In telling the stories of the Shakerites who built and live in this community, Meckler asks: Can a group of well-intentioned people fulfill the promise of racial integration in America? What does success look like and has Shaker achieved it? What are Black Americans asked to sacrifice and what will white people have to give up? The result is a complex portrait of a place that, while never perfect, has achieved more than most, and a road map for communities that seek to do the same.
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Confronting injustice & inequity is messy. It‘s not that easy when our systems depend on racism. I appreciate this book depicts a bunch of people trying to various degrees & mixed success at creating equity. It also brings the issue of integration to right now, which I also appreciate because we like to think of school segregation as being behind us. It‘s not.
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Thanks to @DimeryRene for pointing out the Little Fires Everywhere connection.

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Best nonfiction of August goes to this look at the early integrated community of Shaker Heights, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland. Originally developed as a whites-only city, Shaker slowly allowed Black folks in and was one of few cities to make school integration a priority. Each chapter focuses on an individual in the community who shaped either the integration of property or schools and the negative and positive impacts their policies had.

Cinfhen Ohhh, interesting! #stacked - I think Shaker Heights used to be a heavily populated Jewish area 8mo
Prairiegirl_reading Very interesting! I think Shaker Heights was the setting of Little Fires Everywhere. 8mo
Megabooks @Cinfhen yes, some of the first integration was Jewish people! While the book mainly focused on Black/white integration, people of other races and ethnicities were included in the story of Shaker. 8mo
Megabooks @Prairiegirl_reading that‘s what drew me to it because I found Ng‘s take on race and class in that suburb really interesting. 👍🏻 8mo
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