Synopses & Reviews
A sweeping epidemic of hate crime targeted over one hundred Southern Black Churches between 1995 and 1996, leaving them in charred ruins. St. John Baptist Church in Dixiana, South Carolina, was one of the first destroyed. This small, isolated church had faced dark times before. It had been viciously desecrated in 1985 and withstood more attacks until it was burned down in August 1995.
From the beginning, two friends--a white woman named Ammie Murray, and a black woman named Barbara Simmons--rallied volunteers to rebuild the historic St. John. Much to their amazement, hundreds of people from diverse racial and cultural backgrounds responded to their call for help. They refused to stop rebuilding the church-despite repeated attempts on Ammie and Barbara's lives and relentless attacks on the church. Soon, these two heroic women joined the leaders and congregations from two other burned, black churches-Macedonia Baptist and Mt. Zion AME-in leading the nation in a courageous battle against hate crime in the deep South.
Beautifully rendered with warmth and grace, this inspiring story of enduring friendship, reconciliation, spiritual strength, and hope shows us how we can triumph over racial hatred.
Review
"an astonishing, unsentimental study of evil and goodness...I cried while reading this book and sobbed shamelessly at its end." (Marjorie Reynolds, author of The Civil Wars of Jonah Moran)
Review
"Celebrating courage, faith, and love...makes us believe that miracles do happen." (Carrie Allen McCray, author of Freedom's Child)
Review
"...a ruthlessly honest account of the new progressive South still struggling with a very old legacy of hate." --
USA Today"
...shows how faith, love, and sheer bullheadedness may lose battle after battle against racism - and still win the war." --O Magazine
Synopsis
Probing the dark corners of the South, this book follows the courageous people who risked their lives to rebuild the black churches in order to heal the Southern community.
About the Author
Sandra E. Johnson is a regular guest columnist for
The State, South Carolina's largest newspaper. Her work has also appeared in the
Washington Post, Transitions Abroad, and
Columbia Metropolitan magazine. She lives in Columbia, South Carolina about twenty miles from St. John Baptist Church, and participated in its rebuilding.