‘Linda Gorham’
Reflections on the 4th July: 40 American Stories
In honor of Independence Day, we’ve created a special Fourth of July showcase, featuring 40 original stories from Americans of diverse backgrounds, faiths and colors. We invite you to celebrate the 4th of July with these rarely told stories recalling the contributions and the struggles, the successes and hopes in search of the amazing identity that is America.
Each year, the Fourth of July gives us all a wonderful chance to celebrate America’s deeply prized values—liberty, freedom and equality. We mark the occasion with picnics, parades and BBQs, and we express our patriotism with flags and songs. Amid the fanfare and fireworks, however, we don’t always have the opportunity to reflect more deeply on the ideals on which our nation was founded. We don’t often have the chance to consider our progress toward equality for all men and women, and to explore the diversity that is the hallmark of the American identity.
Lucky for us: artists have been doing just that for centuries. From Thoreau to Springsteen, writers, artists and storytellers have shared their perspectives on America’s promise and inspired their countrymen to keep working toward the attainment of a truly free country for all. With that in mind, we’ve created this special Fourth of July video showcase to celebrate America’s independence, its promise of equality for all, and the beauty and challenge of diversity.
We invite you to visit our Showcase Page where our artists of the spoken word — professional storytellers –tell their stories for the 4th July — or for any time.
Rosa Parks: One of Many Who Sat Down to Stand Up
Rosa Parks is best known for her refusal to give up her seat to a white man on a Montgomery, Alabama bus in 1955. Her action galvanized the growing Civil Rights Movement and led to the successful Montgomery bus boycott. But even before her defiant act and the resulting boycott, Ms. Parks was dedicated to racial justice and equality. She remained a source of inspiration and, most importantly, an activist for the remainder of her life.
In this compelling story, a dramatization by Storyteller Linda Gorham, Ms. Park’s story is illuminated to better understand the bravery of those who stood up to discrimination given the ignorance and violence of the times.
A corresponding lesson plan suitable for use in high school – adult learning environments is available free of charge by visiting RaceBridgesforSchools.com. This lesson plan will help students of all ages to become more familiar with the Rosa Parks’ story in a way that will challenge them to understand the challenges and feelings during the Civil Rights Movement in the U.S. during the 1950s-1960s.
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STORY CREDIT:
Copyright ©2010 Storyteller Linda Gorham. Used with permission.
JustStories Project Launches New Video Web Site Aimed at Celebrating Diversity and Bridging Racial Differences
CHICAGO (March 1, 2010) – The JustStories initiative, an 8 year-old Chicago area festival that explores diversity through the performances of professional storytellers, is expanding its outreach with a new video web site, racebridgesvideos.com
Debuting on March 1, racebridgesvideos.com features high-quality digital videos of professional storytellers, such as Michael McCarty, Susan O’Halloran and Arif Choudhury, as they share original and personal stories about race, identity and family. By sharing these engaging stories through video, this project seeks to promote understanding and to bridge racial divides.
“These stories are not just about race. They speak of belonging, resilience, the desire for inclusion, and hope—things we all feel as humans, regardless of race,“ says Derek Simons, creative director of Angels Studio, a Chicago-based communications agency devoted to bringing the races together and building bridges of cooperation between different faith groups using the digital and expressive arts. “With the videos, we hope to share these messages with all kinds of people, young and old, whether individually, in classrooms, faith communities or even businesses.”
The storytellers featured on racebridgesvideos.com are both male and female, and represent the wide fabric of American diversity; they are African-American, Jewish, Hindu, Native American, Cuban, Irish, and so on. Their stories are often very personal, such as Syd Lieberman’s “Aunt Helen,” while others are dramatizations of historical people and events, such as Linda Gorham’s “Rosa,” which describes Rosa Parks’ famous stand against segregation.
Simons and the Angels Studio team have been organizing the JustStories Storytelling Festival and other live events around Chicago for the last eight years. They are also responsible for the educators’ resource,RaceBridgesForSchools.com, which provides teachers with lesson plans and other classroom materials to help students explore differences and build inclusive, welcoming communities.
About Angels Studio, JustStories and RaceBridges
Angels Studio is a communications ministry of the Roman Catholic Order – the Society of The Divine Word. This community serves people of faith, or without faith, around the world, in the belief that there is a rightful and just place for all God’s Children at the table of life. Angels Studio produces the RaceBridges and JustStories initiatives. The universal mission of these projects is to unite people of all faiths, people of no particular religious faith, and all people of goodwill to work at the unfinished business of building bridges across racial and class division.

