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Just curious
Good afternoon, I hope you all are having a day that feels like the beach on a hot summers day with nice breeze. Just curious. How is this book club supposed to work? What is the format?
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Welcome to the Heirs of the Great Migration Collective
Welcome to the Heirs of the Great Migration Collective This is not a traditional book club. This is a space to think, reflect, and locate yourself within history—specifically the Blackamerican experience shaped by the Great Migration and everything that followed. We are working through: - The Warmth of Other Suns (Wilkerson) - White Rage (Anderson) - The Counter-Revolution of 1776 (Horne) - Heirs of the Great Migration (Wright) This space is built on a few principles: - No summaries. We are here to analyze, question, and interpret. - Respectful but honest dialogue. Disagreement is welcome—lazy thinking is not. - Make it personal. Where does this show up in your family, your city, your life? - Push your thinking. If something feels uncomfortable, sit with it. Lets start with some introductions. Share as much or as little as you are comfortable. I’ll go first— I’m Manny James Wright. I was born and raised in Waterbury, Connecticut, a city shaped by the Great Migration and deindustrialization. My family’s roots trace back to the South (maternal, North Carolina; paternal, Virginia), like many Blackamerican families, and that history has shaped how I understand education, community, and opportunity. I’ve lived in places like Atlanta, Cairo, and Southern California, and my work sits at the intersection of leadership, policy, and the lived experiences of Blackamerican communities. This is about more than reading.This is about understanding what we inherited—and what we do with it.
The Truth About Black Education
Most recent youtube post with some great book recommendations.
Heirs of the Great Migration: How the Past Became the Future
This book review centers on four books: The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson, alongside White Rage (Carol Anderson), The Counter-Revolution of 1776 (Gerald Horne), and my own Heirs of the Great Migration to rethink the story of Black movement in America. We unpack why millions of Black Americans left the South, what they were escaping, what they encountered in the North, and the long history of Black resistance and struggles for freedom and dignity. And how cycles of backlash and control followed them across generations. This isn’t just a book discussion. It’s about freedom, identity, migration, racial power, deindustrialization, public schools, and the question many of us still carry: what happened to the promise?
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Heirs Reading Collective
skool.com/heirs-reading-collective-8060
Most people don’t read, and even fewer question what they were taught. This group is for the ones who do both.
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