Hubbry Logo
search
logo
1835697

Julius Lester

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Julius Bernard Lester (January 27, 1939 – January 18, 2018) was an American writer of books for children and adults[1] and an academic who taught for 32 years (1971–2003) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Lester was also a civil rights activist, a photographer,[2] and a musician who recorded two albums of folk music and original songs.[3]

Key Information

Early life and family

[edit]

Born on January 27, 1939, St. Louis, Missouri, Julius Lester was the son of W. D. Lester, a Methodist minister, and Julia (Smith) Lester. In 1941, the family moved to Kansas City, Kansas, and then to Nashville, Tennessee, in 1952.[4] He also spent his summers with his grandmother on her farm in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.[5] In 1960 he received his BA from Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, with a major in English and minors in Art and Spanish.[4]

In 1961 he moved to New York City where he was a folk singer and a photographer for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.[6]

Lester married Joan Steinau in 1962.[7] They had two children, Jody Simone (1965) and Malcolm Coltrane (1967). They divorced in 1970. In 1979 he married Alida Carolyn Fechner, who had a daughter, Elena Milad. Fechner and Lester had a son together named David Julius.[8] They divorced in 1991. He married Milan Sabatini in 1995. His stepdaughter from this marriage is Lián Amaris.[8]

Civil rights years

[edit]

During college, Lester became involved in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). Among his major efforts in those years was participation in the 1964 Mississippi Summer Project. His experiences during "Freedom Summer" were documented in a 2014 documentary The Folk Singer, which aired as part of the American Experience series on PBS. Lester also traveled to North Vietnam with SNCC to photograph and write about the damage caused by U.S. bombing missions there.

During his New York years, Lester hosted Uncle Tom's Cabin, a radio show on WBAI-FM (1968–75); and co-hosted (with Jonathan Black) Free Time, a television show on WNET-NY (Channel 13), for two years. He taught guitar and banjo and worked as a folk singer "singing at rallies, and hootenannies and fundraising events in New York for SNCC."[9] He recorded two albums of traditional and original songs for Vanguard Records: Julius Lester (1966) and Departures (1967).[10] And he performed on the coffeehouse circuit. A compilation of songs from both albums was released on a CD, Dressed Like Freedom, on Ace Records in 2007.

Lester's 1966 essay "The Angry Children of Malcolm X," is considered one of the definitive African-American statements of its era.[11] As his reputation grew, Lester wrote Look Out, Whitey! Black Power's Gon' Get Your Mama! (Dial, 1968), which he characterized as the "first book about the black power movement by someone inside the black power movement".[12][13]

Conversion to Judaism

[edit]

In 1982, Lester converted to Judaism.[14][15] He has said that his conversion journey began when he was seven and learned that his maternal great-grandfather, Adolph Altschul, was a Jewish immigrant from Germany, who married a freed slave.[16] He adopted the Hebrew name Yaakov Daniel ben Avraham v’Sarah.[17] He was a leader of the Beth El Synagogue in St. Johnsbury, Vermont, from 1991 to 2001.[6]

Academic career

[edit]

From 1968 to 1970, alongside his activities as a radio host in New York, Lester taught Afro-American history at the New School for Social Research.[18] In 1971 he began teaching at the University of Massachusetts Amherst as a visiting lecturer in the Afro-American Studies department; he became an associate professor in the department in 1975 and a full professor in 1977.[19]

In 1988, Lester came into conflict with his colleagues in the Afro-American Studies department upon the publication of his book Lovesong, which chronicles his conversion to Judaism. In the book he refers to a lecture at the university by the author James Baldwin several years earlier, and characterizes certain remarks that Baldwin made as antisemitic.[14][20][21] In March 1988, in a unanimous step, the Afro-American Studies faculty wrote a letter to the university administration recommending that Lester be reassigned to a different department.[22][23] Following negotiations that involved the chancellor of the university, the dean of the faculty, and Lester himself,[23] Lester transferred to the Judaic and Near Eastern Studies department (where he had held a joint appointment since 1982),[19] and remained there for the rest of his university career, until his retirement at the end of 2003.[20][21]

During his 32 years at the university, Lester taught courses in five departments: Comparative Literature ("Black and White Southern Fiction"), English ("Religion in Western Literature"), Afro-American Studies ("The Writings of W. E. B. Du Bois"), ("Writings of James Baldwin"), ("Literature of the Harlem Renaissance"), ("Blacks and Jews: A Comparative Study"), and Judaic Studies ("Biblical Tales and Legends") and ("The Writings of Elie Wiesel"), History ("Social Change and the 1960s"), one of the university's largest and most popular courses.

Lester was awarded all three of the university's most prestigious faculty awards: the Distinguished Teacher's Award, the Faculty Fellowship Award for Distinguished Research and Scholarship, and the Chancellor's Medal, the university's highest honor.[18] The Council for Advancement and Support of Education selected him as the Massachusetts State Professor of the Year 1986.[18]

Creative endeavors

[edit]

In addition to performing songs and recording albums, Lester wrote eight nonfiction books, 31 children's books, one book of poetry and photographs (with David Gahr), and three adult novels. His first book was an instructional guide to playing the 12-string guitar, co-authored with Pete Seeger.[10] Among the awards his books received were the Newbery Honor, Boston Globe-Horn Book Award, Coretta Scott King Award, National Book Award finalist, ALA Notable Book, National Jewish Book Award finalist, National Book Critics Circle Honor Book, and the New York Times Outstanding Book Award. His books have been translated into eight languages.[18][24]

He published more than 200 essays and book and film reviews for such publications as The New York Times Book Review, The New York Times Op-Ed page, The Boston Globe, Village Voice, The New Republic, Sing Out!, Moment, Forward and Dissent.[18][10]

His photographs have been included in an exhibit of images from the civil rights movement at the Smithsonian Institution. He had solo shows at the University of Massachusetts Student Union Gallery, the Forbes Library, Northampton, Mass., Valley Photo Center, Springfield, Mass., and the Robert Floyd Photography Gallery, Southampton, Mass.[25]

Lester's work was included in the 2025 exhibition Photography and the Black Arts Movement, 1955–1985 at the National Gallery of Art. [26]

Death

[edit]

Lester died of complications from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) on January 18, 2018, after a brief hospitalization.[16][20][27]

Written works

[edit]
  • The Folksinger's Guide to the 12-String Guitar as Played by Leadbelly, Lester and Pete Seeger (1965)
  • Look Out, Whitey! Black Power Gon' Get Your Mama (1968)
  • To Be a Slave (1968)
  • Search for the New Land (1969)
  • Revolutionary Notes (1969)
  • Black Folktales (1969)
  • The Seventh Son: The Thoughts and Writings of W. E. B. DuBois (1971)
  • Two Love Stories (1972)
  • Long Journey Home: Stories from Black History (1972)
  • The Knee-High Man and Other Tales, illustrations by Ralph Pinto (1972)
  • Who I Am, photographs by David Gahr (1974)
  • All Is Well (1976)
  • This Strange New Feeling (1982)
  • Do Lord Remember Me (1984)
  • The Tales of Uncle Remus: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit, illus. Jerry Pinkney (1987)
  • Lovesong: Becoming a Jew (1988)
  • More Tales of Uncle Remus: Further Adventures of Brer Rabbit, His Friends, Enemies, and Others, illus. Jerry Pinkney (1988)
  • How Many Spots Does a Leopard Have? And Other Tales, illus. David Shannon (1989)
  • Further Tales of Uncle Remus: The Misadventures of Brer Rabbit, Brer Fox, Brer Wolf, the Doodang, and Other Creatures, illus. Jerry Pinkney (1990)
  • Falling Pieces of the Broken Sky (1990)
  • The Last Tales of Uncle Remus, illus. Jerry Pinkney (1994)
  • The Man Who Knew Too Much, illus. Leonard Jenkins (1994)
  • And All Our Wounds Forgiven (1994)
  • John Henry, illus. Jerry Pinkney (1994)
  • Othello: A Novel (1995)
  • Sam and the Tigers, illus. Jerry Pinkney (1996)
  • From Slaveship to Freedom Road, paintings by Rod Brown (1998)
  • Black Cowboy, Wild Horses: A True Story, illus. Jerry Pinkney (1998)
  • What a Truly Cool World, illus. Joe Cepeda (1999)
  • When the Beginning Began, illus. Emily Lisker (1999)
  • Albidaro and the Mischievous Dream, illus. Jerry Pinkney (2000)
  • Pharaoh's Daughter: A Novel (2000)
  • The Blues Singers: Ten Who Rocker the World, illus. Lisa Cohen (2001)
  • When Dad Killed Mom (2001)
  • Ackamarackus: Julius Lester's Sumptuously Silly Fantastically Funny Fables, illus. Emilie Chollat (2001)
  • Why Heaven Is Far Away, illus. Joe Cependa (2002)
  • Shining, illus. John Clapp (2003)
  • The Autobiography of God (2004)
  • Let's Talk About Race, illus. Karen Barbour (2005)
  • On Writing for Children and Other People (2005)
  • Day of Tears: A Novel in Dialogue (2005)
  • The Old African, illus. Jerry Pinkney (2005)
  • Time's Memory (2006)
  • Cupid: A Novel (2007)
  • Guardian (2008)
  • The Hungry Ghosts (2009)
  • The Girl Who Saved Yesterday (2016)[28]

Awards

[edit]

Book awards

[edit]

Other awards

[edit]
  • Distinguished Teacher's Award, 1983–84
  • Faculty Fellowship Award for Distinguished Research and Scholarship, 1985
  • National Professor of the Year Silver Medal Award, Council for Advancement and Support of Education, 1985
  • Massachusetts State Professor of the Year and Gold Medal Award for National Professor of the Year, Council for Advancement and Support of Education, both 1986
  • Distinguished Faculty Lecturer, 1986–87.

References

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Julius Bernard Lester (January 27, 1939 – January 18, 2018) was an American author, folk musician, photographer, civil rights activist, and university professor noted for his prolific output of over 40 books exploring African American history, folklore, and the legacy of slavery, including the Newbery Honor recipient To Be a Slave (1968).[1][2] Born in St. Louis, Missouri, to a Methodist minister father and raised amid the constraints of Jim Crow segregation, Lester graduated from Fisk University in 1960 with a degree in English and immersed himself in the civil rights movement, serving as a photographer and communications secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from 1964 to 1968.[1][3] Lester's early career encompassed folk music performances alongside figures like Pete Seeger and radio hosting, before he pivoted to writing and academia, joining the University of Massachusetts Amherst faculty in 1971, where he taught African American studies and later Judaic and Near Eastern studies, earning distinctions such as the Distinguished Teacher's Award.[4][5] His literary achievements extended to Caldecott Honor for John Henry (1994) and National Book Award finalist status for The Long Journey Home (1972), with works blending historical narratives, slave testimonies, and personal reflections to illuminate Black experiences.[1][6] A defining evolution marked Lester's life when he converted to Judaism in 1982, chronicled in his memoir Lovesong: Becoming a Jew (1988), which critiqued antisemitism within Black nationalist circles and drew sharp rebukes from colleagues, leading to his departure from the Afro-American Studies department amid accusations of disloyalty to Black causes.[7][8] Earlier, his militant stance in the 1960s included statements that provoked charges of antisemitism, such as defending aspects of Black-Jewish tensions in ways that alienated allies, though he later renounced such views in favor of unequivocal opposition to prejudice against Jews.[8][9] These shifts underscored Lester's contrarian intellect, prioritizing personal conviction over ideological conformity, even as they fueled ongoing debates about race, religion, and identity in American intellectual life.[10]

Early Life

Childhood and Family Background

Julius Lester was born on January 27, 1939, in St. Louis, Missouri, to Woodie Daniel Lester, a Methodist minister, and Julia Smith Lester.[11] The family relocated frequently as his father accepted pastoral positions at Methodist churches across the South, moving to Kansas City, Kansas, when Lester was two years old in 1941, and later to Nashville, Tennessee, in 1954.[2] [11] Lester spent summers on his grandmother's farm in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, immersing him in rural Southern African American oral traditions and storytelling patterns.[12] His father's profession embedded the family in church communities, where Lester encountered gospel music and the moral frameworks of Methodism amid the systemic racial segregation of the Jim Crow era.[1] These experiences in segregated Missouri, Kansas, Tennessee, and Arkansas shaped his early encounters with Southern racial dynamics and community discipline.[13]

Education and Early Influences

Julius Lester was born on January 27, 1939, in St. Louis, Missouri, to Woodie Daniel Lester, a Methodist minister, and Julia Smith Lester.[11] Raised in Kansas City, Kansas, and Nashville, Tennessee after his family relocated in 1954, he spent summers on his grandmother's farm in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, immersing him in Southern rural life and family oral histories of enslavement, including the origin of the Lester surname from a white enslaving family.[2][11] His Methodist upbringing, centered on his father's sermons emphasizing black cultural traditions and moral sanctity, fostered early reflections on racial heritage amid pervasive Jim Crow segregation and witnessed violence, prompting personal inquiries into black identity distinct from later organized activism.[2][14] From childhood, Lester pursued self-education through voracious reading from his father's library, finding solace and intellectual expansion in works like the biography of W.E.B. Du Bois amid the constraints of racial realities.[2] Parallel to this, he cultivated a deep affinity for music, self-teaching instruments including banjo, guitar, clarinet, and piano, which served as both personal expression and escape.[11] Lester enrolled at Fisk University in Nashville, a historically black institution, where he majored in English and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1960.[11][2] His university years reinforced these self-directed interests, with folk music emerging as a key influence—particularly figures like Pete Seeger—sparking initial performance experiments that blended personal artistry with broader cultural exploration prior to professional commitments.[14][2]

Civil Rights Activism

Involvement with SNCC and Protests

Julius Lester joined the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the early 1960s, initially engaging through folk singing at mass meetings and rallies to mobilize supporters during civil rights campaigns.[15] His first direct involvement in SNCC's Deep South operations occurred during the Freedom Summer project of 1964, where he participated in voter registration drives in Mississippi amid widespread resistance from local authorities and violence against activists.[3] These efforts targeted the disenfranchisement of Black voters, with SNCC organizers facing over 1,000 arrests and numerous beatings that summer, though registration successes remained limited due to literacy tests and intimidation.[16] As SNCC's communications intensified, Lester contributed as a photographer from 1964 to 1968, documenting fieldwork, protests, and community organizing in the Black South, which provided visual evidence of ongoing segregation and activist resilience.[17] His images captured raw scenes of rural poverty and defiance, supporting SNCC's propaganda to highlight the persistence of de facto segregation despite federal interventions like the Civil Rights Act of 1964.[18] Participation in marches and direct-action protests exposed him to tactical nonviolence, but empirical failures—such as low voter turnout gains and backlash violence—fueled disillusionment within SNCC ranks.[1] By mid-decade, Lester aligned with SNCC's ideological pivot toward Black Power, revamping the organization's publication department in 1966 to produce materials emphasizing Black self-determination and separatism as responses to integration's shortcomings.[3] This shift coincided with internal fractures, including heated debates over white involvement; SNCC's May 1966 retreat in Knoxville led to a vote expelling white members from staff positions, a decision Lester supported as reflective of growing radicalization driven by the perceived inefficacy of interracial coalitions against systemic barriers.[19] The policy, ratified under new chairman Stokely Carmichael, marked a causal break from earlier nonviolent inclusivity, prioritizing Black-led autonomy amid evidence of stalled progress, such as Mississippi's Black voter registration hovering below 7% pre-1965.

Media Work and Public Commentary

In the mid-1960s, Julius Lester utilized radio broadcasting on New York City's WBAI-FM to merge folk music performances with discussions of civil rights issues, amplifying activist voices through live segments and call-ins that reached urban audiences attuned to progressive causes.[14] His programs often featured politically charged content, drawing from his experiences as a folk singer and SNCC affiliate, which extended the movement's messaging beyond rallies into everyday listening.[3] Lester released two folk albums on Vanguard Records that incorporated socially conscious lyrics addressing racial injustice: Julius Lester in 1966 and Departures in 1967, both blending blues influences with protest themes to disseminate civil rights narratives via commercial recordings.[20] These works, produced during peak folk revival interest, provided a platform for his original songs critiquing white America, achieving modest distribution through Vanguard's catalog of activist-oriented artists.[21] As SNCC's director of photography from 1964 to 1968, Lester documented protests and daily life in the Black South, publishing images in movement publications and essays such as "The Angry Children of Malcolm X" in Sing Out! magazine in 1966, which analyzed rising Black militancy and reached folk and leftist readerships.[22][23] His photographs captured key figures like Stokely Carmichael and grassroots actions in Mississippi and Atlanta, contributing visual evidence that bolstered fundraising and awareness efforts, though their raw depictions sometimes intensified debates over nonviolence versus confrontation.[15] A notable escalation occurred in late 1968 amid the New York City teachers' strike, when Lester, hosting a WBAI political talk show, aired an unsolicited anti-Semitic poem read live by caller Leslie R. Campbell, a Black playwright, without interruption or rebuttal, framing it as authentic Black sentiment on Jewish teachers' union influence.[14] The broadcast provoked immediate protests from Jewish organizations and the United Federation of Teachers, who demanded FCC intervention and accused the station of fomenting hate; WBAI defended it as free speech but faced donor backlash and internal scrutiny, highlighting tensions in Lester's unfiltered approach to airing radical viewpoints.[4][24] This incident curtailed his radio prominence, underscoring how his commitment to raw civil rights discourse inadvertently amplified divisive rhetoric.[14]

International Engagements

In spring 1967, Lester joined a Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) delegation to North Vietnam, traveling with activist Charles Cobb under the auspices of the International War Crimes Tribunal. The mission focused on firsthand observation of U.S. bombing campaigns, with Lester employing photography to record infrastructure damage and civilian hardships in Hanoi and surrounding areas.[3][25] Lester's documentation emphasized structural devastation from American airstrikes, including bombed-out factories and hospitals, which he likened in reports to the systemic violence faced by Black Americans in the U.S. South. These accounts, disseminated through SNCC channels upon his return, portrayed the Vietnam War as an extension of imperialist aggression, aligning with the organization's evolving internationalist critique of U.S. policy.[25][14] The trip facilitated limited interactions with North Vietnamese officials and anti-war figures affiliated with the Tribunal, though logistical constraints from ongoing hostilities prevented deeper engagements or extension into South Vietnam. Lester's observations contributed to SNCC's propaganda efforts, framing global conflicts as interconnected with domestic racial struggles and bolstering arguments against U.S. interventionism within Black Power circles.[3][26]

Key Controversies

Early Racial and Anti-Semitic Incidents

In December 1968, amid the New York City teachers' strike that exacerbated black-Jewish community tensions, Julius Lester hosted a WBAI-FM radio program where teacher Les Campbell read an anti-Semitic poem authored by a 15-year-old high school student.[27] The broadcast, occurring on December 26, prompted immediate backlash from Jewish organizations and the United Federation of Teachers, who filed complaints with the Federal Communications Commission, decrying it as promotion of hatred during a period when some black activists accused Jewish educators of exploiting black students.[28] Lester defended the airing as part of open debate on racial grievances, but the incident fueled accusations of his insensitivity to anti-Semitism, with Jewish groups demanding the station curb such content; WBAI directors rejected these calls, prioritizing free expression.[24][29] By 1979, Lester's stance had shifted publicly against anti-Semitism within black communities, as detailed in his "Report on Black Anti-Semitism" published in The Village Voice, where he criticized African-American leaders for scapegoating Jews—such as blaming a supposed "Jewish lobby" for U.S. policy setbacks—and argued that such rhetoric echoed historical prejudices rather than addressing root economic disparities.[14][8] This defense of American Jews strained Lester's ties with former Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) allies, many of whom had adopted black nationalist ideologies post-1966 that increasingly portrayed Jews as impediments to black self-determination, leading to his ostracism in those circles as evidenced by personal accounts and contemporaneous media reports on fractured alliances.[8] The essay underscored causal frictions from competing identity claims, where black grievances against perceived Jewish economic dominance clashed with Jewish sensitivities to resurgent anti-Semitism, without resolution through shared civil rights history.[14]

Criticisms from Black Nationalist Circles

By the late 1970s, Julius Lester's evolving views on black-Jewish relations drew sharp rebukes from segments of the black nationalist movement, which perceived his critiques of anti-Semitism within black communities as a dilution of uncompromising black power ideology. In a September 1979 essay titled "The Uses of Suffering" published in The Village Voice, Lester argued that some black activists were succumbing to longstanding anti-Semitic stereotypes, such as portraying Jews as exploitative landlords or conspirators, thereby echoing historical libels rather than addressing root causes of inequality through self-reliance.[30][31] This piece, coming from a former SNCC firebrand, was interpreted by critics in radical circles as an abandonment of solidarity against white supremacy in favor of defending Jewish interests, marking an early fracture that positioned Lester as moderating the absolutist racial separatism of black power advocates.[14] Lester's 1982 conversion to Judaism intensified these accusations, with some black nationalists viewing it as a personal and ideological betrayal that prioritized Jewish identity over black unity. His public embrace of Judaism, detailed in subsequent writings, was described as shocking to those familiar with his earlier militant rhetoric, effectively alienating him from events and networks centered on black cultural nationalism.[32] This shift aligned with Lester's growing emphasis on individual moral agency over collective entitlements, including skepticism toward affirmative action programs, which he saw as fostering dependency rather than empowerment—a stance that clashed with nationalist demands for group-based reparations and quotas.[33][34] The most concrete manifestation of this exclusion occurred in 1988 at the University of Massachusetts, where Lester, then a professor in the Afro-American Studies department, faced departmental pushback after criticizing James Baldwin's alleged anti-Semitic statements in his memoir Lovesong: Becoming a Jew. Colleagues accused him of ideological disloyalty, leading to his removal from black studies teaching roles amid claims of harassment and political intolerance; Lester contended this constituted a purge driven by intolerance for dissenting views on intra-community issues like anti-Semitism.[29][14][10] Such incidents underscored broader tensions, where Lester's rejection of victimhood narratives and advocacy for personal responsibility were branded by nationalist critics as capitulation to assimilationist pressures, resulting in his marginalization from black radical forums.[35]

Religious and Ideological Shift

Path to Judaism

Lester was raised in a devout Methodist household, with his father serving as a black Methodist minister in Arkansas and later Tennessee, instilling in him an early familiarity with Christian faith and its communal rituals.[36] However, as a child, he exhibited an unexpected affinity for Jewish elements, repeatedly playing a Jewish song he heard on the radio on the piano, which foreshadowed a deeper spiritual pull beyond his upbringing.[4] This initial curiosity persisted amid his civil rights activism and subsequent embrace of black nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s, periods marked by intense personal identity struggles that eroded his connection to Christianity.[1] By the 1970s, Lester's disillusionment with Methodism and the black church intensified, as he perceived their frameworks as entangled with racial particularism rather than universal ethical principles, prompting a reevaluation of faith amid broader ideological shifts away from earlier radicalism.[36] He began intensive self-study of Jewish texts, including the Torah, drawn to Judaism's emphasis on ethical monotheism and moral reasoning as a counter to essentialist views of race that had dominated his prior worldview.[37] This personal exploration, rooted in individual spiritual seeking rather than external trends, culminated in his formal conversion to Judaism in 1982 under Conservative auspices.[1][38] The conversion process included ritual immersion in a mikveh and the adoption of the Hebrew name Yaakov Daniel, marking tangible steps in his commitment to Jewish practice and identity.[1] Over time, Lester progressed from Reform to Conservative Judaism, engaging deeply with synagogue prayer leadership and observance of traditional mitzvot, reflecting a sustained, causality-driven embrace of Judaism's demands on personal ethics and covenantal life.[12][36]

Reactions and Personal Repercussions

Lester's 1982 conversion to Judaism elicited sharp criticism from segments of the African American community, who viewed it as a betrayal of racial solidarity and an act of assimilation into perceived white institutions. Some labeled him a "race traitor," interpreting the shift as cultural erasure and abandonment of black identity in favor of Judaism, often equated with whiteness in black nationalist discourse.[14] This alienation manifested in personal interactions, with acquaintances altering their behavior toward him as if his core personality had changed, and a prevailing sentiment that one could not authentically be both black and Jewish. The unique antagonism toward his Jewish affiliation contrasted with tolerance for conversions to other faiths like Catholicism or Islam, underscoring tensions rooted in historical black-Jewish frictions rather than religious pluralism alone.[39] In contrast, Jewish communities largely accepted Lester despite his prior role in anti-Semitic incidents, such as the 1968 broadcast controversy, hailing him as a devoted practitioner and role model for Jews of color. Rabbi Capers Funnye described him as "a friend and devoted Jew," while advocates like Robin Washington credited his decades-long efforts to foster acceptance of black Jews within broader Jewish spaces. Internal Jewish debates on the authenticity of black converts persisted, with Lester frequently queried on divisions exemplified by figures like Louis Farrakhan, yet his Zionist advocacy post-conversion mitigated earlier suspicions of anti-Semitism.[38][14] The conversion imposed personal costs, including deepened estrangement from black peers and professional fallout, as evidenced by his 1988 removal from a University of Massachusetts Afro-American studies position following criticism of James Baldwin's anti-Semitic remarks. These repercussions stemmed directly from Lester's prioritization of spiritual conviction and ancestral Jewish heritage—traced to a German immigrant forebear—over prevailing expectations of racial loyalty, though family-specific strains remain undocumented in primary accounts.[14][40]

Academic Career

Teaching Roles and Curriculum Development

Lester joined the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 1971 as a visiting lecturer in the W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies.[5] He advanced to associate professor in 1976 and achieved full professorship in 1981, reflecting peer-evaluated recognition of his scholarly contributions amid departmental scrutiny.[5] In the 1980s, Lester transferred from Afro-American Studies to the Department of Judaic and Near Eastern Studies, a move coinciding with evolving academic focuses and external controversies that tested institutional commitments to viewpoint diversity.[5] [14] He remained in this role, teaching interdisciplinary courses in history, English, and related fields, until retiring in 2003 as professor emeritus.[7] [5] Lester's pedagogical approach emphasized rigorous examination of historical and cultural materials, prioritizing evidentiary analysis in curriculum design to counter dogmatic interpretations prevalent in ethnic studies programs of the era.[5] This method, grounded in his prior work with folk traditions and activism, facilitated transitions between departments by demonstrating value through student engagement and empirical outcomes rather than ideological alignment.[11]

Scholarly Publications and Debates

Lovesong: Becoming a Jew (1988), Lester's memoir chronicling his conversion to Judaism, incorporated pointed critiques of anti-Semitic rhetoric within black intellectual circles, notably James Baldwin's classroom remarks likening Jews to "white devils" and responding to Jesse Jackson's "Hymietown" slur without condemnation.[41] [10] Lester maintained that Baldwin harbored no personal animus against Jews but that such statements propagated anti-Semitic tropes nonetheless, urging self-awareness over denial.[29] This analysis, grounded in direct observation of Baldwin's 1986 UMass lecture, ignited academic disputes, as Lester's refusal to exempt black figures from scrutiny clashed with norms shielding intra-community critique.[41] The publication exacerbated tensions at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where Lester held a position in the Afro-American Studies department; student protests and faculty petitions in spring 1988 demanded his ouster, citing his essay on Baldwin as evidence of disloyalty to black solidarity.[41] [10] University administrators reassigned him to English and Judaic Studies departments amid charges of censorship, drawing national coverage in outlets like The New York Times that highlighted threats to viewpoint diversity in ethnic studies programs.[41] Despite ideological pushback, the episode underscored Lester's insistence on evidence-based discourse, with no substantive refutations of his Baldwin account emerging; instead, responses emphasized emotional grievance over factual engagement.[10] Lester extended such reasoning in essays critiquing victimhood-centric frameworks in black studies, as in "The Unkindness of Strangers" (1991), a Transition review decrying a "moratorium on criticism" that fostered self-pity and sentimentality as reactions to integration's demands for personal accountability.[42] He argued that perpetual emphasis on historical trauma inhibited causal analysis of contemporary behaviors, favoring empirical individualism—rooted in slave narratives and folklore he studied—over collective determinism.[42] [1] These interventions, appearing in peer-reviewed and intellectual journals, influenced curriculum debates by prioritizing primary sources for verifiable agency amid oppression, though they elicited rejections from ideologically aligned peers prioritizing narrative cohesion.[10] Verifiable outcomes included Lester's sustained citations in folklore and Judaic scholarship, alongside his development of courses integrating causal historical methods, contrasting with black studies' frequent sidelining of dissenting empiricism.[5]

Creative Works

Literary Output

Julius Lester authored more than 40 books across genres including children's literature, historical fiction, folktale retellings, and adult novels exploring racial themes.[1] His works often drew from African American oral traditions, emphasizing authentic vernacular dialogue, historical detail, and cultural preservation.[12] Children's books formed a significant portion, with retellings of folktales such as The Tales of Uncle Remus: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit (1987), which reinterpreted Joel Chandler Harris's Brer Rabbit stories through a modern African American lens, incorporating rhythmic prose and Jerry Pinkney's illustrations to highlight trickster archetypes and resilience.[43] Reviewers noted its vibrant storytelling and departure from dialect-heavy originals, earning praise for accessibility and fidelity to black folk heritage.[44] Lester's historical fiction for young readers addressed slavery's brutality, as in Day of Tears: A Novel in Dialogue (2005), depicting the 1850 auction of over 400 enslaved people on a Georgia plantation through interleaved monologues from owners, slaves, and observers, underscoring human cost and moral complicity.[45] Themes of endurance and ethical reckoning recurred, informed by primary sources and Lester's research into black history. Adult-oriented works included novels like Do Lord Remember Me (1985), a first-person narrative from a sharecropper's perspective blending autobiography with social critique on post-slavery Southern life.[46] Essays and nonfiction, such as those in collections on civil rights and identity, interrogated racial dynamics with personal insight, often challenging orthodoxies through lived experience.[2] Reception highlighted Lester's narrative immediacy and integration of oral history with factual rigor, appealing across audiences for eschewing sentimentality in favor of unflinching realism.[14] Books like To Be a Slave (1968) compiled slave narratives to convey unvarnished testimonies, influencing educational curricula by prioritizing primary voices over sanitized accounts.[47] Adaptations and sustained readership reflected broad appeal, with folktale volumes inspiring sequels like Further Tales of Uncle Remus (1990) that expanded trickster lore while maintaining cultural specificity.[48] Overall, Lester's output bridged entertainment and education, fostering empathy via precise, evidence-based portrayals of African American experiences.[49]

Music, Photography, and Other Media

In the mid-1960s, Lester pursued a musical career rooted in folk and blues traditions, recording two albums for Vanguard Records that blended original compositions with traditional songs infused with social protest themes. His debut album, Julius Lester, released in 1966, featured tracks such as interpretations of "Stagolee" alongside self-penned pieces addressing racial injustice and personal reflection, performed acoustically with guitar accompaniment.[20] [50] The follow-up, Departures, issued in 1967, continued this style with blues-influenced originals emphasizing civil rights-era discontent, including songs like those critiquing societal norms through raw, narrative-driven lyrics.[20] [51] These works, produced during Lester's involvement with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), served as auditory extensions of his activism, prioritizing message conveyance over commercial polish.[52] Lester's photography, contemporaneous with his music, focused on evidentiary documentation rather than artistic abstraction, capturing unvarnished scenes from the civil rights struggle in the American South between 1964 and 1968 while working as an SNCC staff photographer. His images depicted rallies, community gatherings, and daily life amid segregation, providing visual records that substantiated movement narratives without embellishment.[3] [53] In 1967, SNCC dispatched Lester to North Vietnam alongside journalist Charles Cobb to photograph U.S. military operations, yielding stark depictions of bombed landscapes and civilian impacts intended to counter domestic propaganda and inform anti-war organizing.[53] [3] These photographs, valued for their factual immediacy, were later exhibited in group shows, including a Smithsonian Institution display on civil rights imagery, and circulated in activist materials to preserve historical causality over interpretive flair.[54] [55]

Awards and Recognition

Literary Honors

Lester's book To Be a Slave (1968), compiling slave narratives with historical context, received the Newbery Honor in 1969, awarded by the American Library Association for its distinguished contribution to children's literature through authentic primary sources illustrating the human cost of slavery.[56] The selection by the Newbery Committee highlighted the work's rigorous assembly of eyewitness accounts, emphasizing empirical historical detail over narrative embellishment. In 2006, Lester won the Coretta Scott King Author Book Award for Day of Tears: A Novel in Dialogue (2005), recognized by the ALA's Ethnic and Multicultural Information Exchange Round Table for its portrayal of the largest slave auction in U.S. history on March 2–3, 1859, focusing on ethical dilemmas faced by participants including auctioneer Pierce M. Butler.[57] The award criteria prioritize books by African American authors that authentically depict the Black experience, with jury selection underscoring the novel's dialogue-driven format drawn from verifiable auction records and its unflinching examination of complicity in human bondage. Lester also earned a Coretta Scott King Author Honor in 1988 for The Tales of Uncle Remus: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit (1987), an adaptation of Joel Chandler Harris's folktales rendered in African American oral tradition, commended for preserving cultural heritage through Lester's idiomatic retellings that restored narrative agency to Black storytelling roots.[58] This honor, determined by the same ALA jury process, valued the book's fidelity to Gullah dialect and trickster motifs as mechanisms for historical resistance, boosting its circulation in educational settings. These accolades, tied to specific jury evaluations of literary merit and cultural accuracy, elevated Lester's works' visibility, with Day of Tears alone seeing sustained reprints following the award.[57]

Academic and Civic Accolades

Lester commenced his academic career as a lecturer at the New School for Social Research in New York before joining the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 1971 as a professor in the Department of Afro-American Studies.[5] Over three decades, he transitioned to teaching in Judaic and Near Eastern Studies while maintaining an adjunct role in English, retiring in 2003 with emeritus status.[5][15] At UMass, Lester received the institution's three most prestigious faculty honors: the Distinguished Teacher's Award, the Faculty Fellowship Award for Distinguished Research and Scholarship, and the Chancellor's Medal, the university's highest accolade.[1] These recognitions affirmed his contributions to scholarship and pedagogy amid evolving departmental dynamics. In 1988, following his conversion to Judaism and associated shifts in racial perspectives, Lester was removed from the African American Studies Department, reflecting ideological tensions, though he persisted in other academic capacities.[12] Civically, Lester's documentation of the civil rights movement through photography garnered archival preservation and exhibition, underscoring his role as an SNCC photographer from 1966 to 1968.[15] His collection, capturing Southern Black life in the 1960s, was designated for permanent archiving at UMass Amherst in 2009, honoring its historical evidentiary value.[59] Exhibitions such as "The Black South in the Sixties" at Princeton University in 2017 further validated this non-literary legacy in visual civil rights historiography.[17]

Later Views on Race and Society

Critiques of Identity Politics

In his 1988 memoir Lovesong: Becoming a Jew, Julius Lester described the backlash from longtime black acquaintances following his 1982 conversion to Judaism, including assertions that no individual could simultaneously identify as both black and Jewish, which he portrayed as emblematic of rigid racial essentialism that constrains personal affiliation and growth.[10] This experience underscored his evolving argument that fixation on racial categories fosters alienation and dependency on group validation, rather than enabling self-reliant exploration of deeper individual identity, as evidenced by his own trajectory from early black nationalist commitments to a transcendent spiritual framework.[10] [14] Lester explicitly rejected race-based exemptions from moral accountability, critiquing James Baldwin's anti-Semitic rhetoric in Lovesong as an instance where group identity excused personal failings, thereby prioritizing causal individual agency over collective narratives that excuse ethical lapses.[10] Such positions drew institutional repercussions, including his 1988 dismissal from the University of Massachusetts Afro-American studies faculty amid accusations of insufficient alignment with prevailing racial orthodoxy.[14] Extending these views into the 21st century, Lester challenged the causal stagnation induced by identity essentialism, arguing in a 2015 essay that racial boundaries imposed by group expectations impede progress by demanding conformity over authentic self-definition, as illustrated by his defense of figures questioning skin-color determinism without demonstrable harm to others.[60] He posited that true advancement arises from rejecting victim-oriented group fixations in favor of mysterious, multifaceted human essence unbound by pigmentation, a principle rooted in his post-1980s renunciation of earlier nationalist excesses that, in his assessment, perpetuated division rather than empowerment.[10] [14]

Perspectives on Black-Jewish Relations

In the 1990s, Julius Lester articulated a nuanced critique of Black-Jewish relations, emphasizing empirical tensions over idealized alliances, as evidenced in his essays and lectures. He acknowledged black anti-Semitism as a pervasive issue, exemplified by the rhetoric of Louis Farrakhan, whose "crude anti-Semitic diatribes" drew support from black audiences amid historical ignorance and nihilism, according to Lester's analysis.[61] Simultaneously, he recognized Jewish racism or condescension toward blacks, describing "the pain of a Jew when confronted with black anti-Semitism and the pain of a black when confronted with Jewish racism."[62] This mutual prejudice framework, detailed in his 1994 lecture at the University of Scranton and contemporaneous writings, rejected narratives of seamless solidarity, instead highlighting how blacks often did not reciprocate Jewish assumptions of shared victimhood.[63] Lester's 1992 "Report on Black Anti-Semitism," delivered to the Anti-Defamation League and published in Jewish Currents, attributed the phenomenon to black community nihilism and illiteracy, urging Jews to leverage their economic and political resources to combat black poverty rather than equate their historical oppressions.[64] He defended Jews against reduction to "white oppressors" in victim-oppressor frameworks prevalent in left-leaning discourse, insisting that Jewish success stemmed from cultural emphases on education and family—factors absent in some black nationalist critiques—while affirming Jews' own history of persecution.[8] This positioned Jews as potential allies capable of tangible aid, countering binaries that dismissed Jewish vulnerability or clout as mere privilege.[4] From the late 1970s through the 1990s, Lester's contrarian interventions—such as his 1979 essay decrying black leaders' scapegoating of a "Jewish lobby" for diplomat Andrew Young's resignation, and his 1994 Dissent piece questioning mutual fascination with Farrakhan's nationalism—spanned a period of heightened community friction, including post-1967 Six-Day War divergences and 1980s affirmative action debates.[8] [61] By embodying dual identities, he bridged dialogues through works like his contribution to anthologies on wary alliances, yet exacerbated divisions by insisting no "magic formula" resolved asymmetries, such as blacks' rejection of presumed common ground with Jews.[65] [4] His approach privileged causal factors like cultural disparities over ideological harmony, fostering realism amid events like the 1991 Crown Heights riots that underscored persistent rifts.[63]

Personal Life and Death

Family and Relationships

Lester's first marriage was to Joan Steinau in 1962, with whom he had daughter Jody Simone Lester (born 1965) and son Malcolm Coltrane Lester (born 1967); the couple divorced in 1970.[21] His second marriage to Alida Carolyn Fechner occurred on March 21, 1979, and produced son David Julius Lester while incorporating stepdaughter Elena Ritter (formerly Milad) from Fechner's prior relationship; they divorced in 1991.[66] [21] Lester married Milan Sabatini in 1995, and they had daughter Lian Amaris Lester together, maintaining this union until his death.[13] [11] Throughout his career, Lester's family offered continuity amid relocations from Nashville, Tennessee, to New York City and later to Belchertown, Massachusetts, where he settled with Sabatini.[11] His 1982 conversion to Judaism, as recounted in the memoir Lovesong: Becoming a Jew (1988), drew from discoveries of Jewish ancestry via his maternal great-grandfather Adolph Altschul and shaped family interpersonal dynamics through shifts in racial and religious self-identification.[10] [4] In his later years, this period marked greater private stability, including raising younger children and sustaining a long-term marriage, distinct from earlier public controversies.[13]

Health Decline and Passing

Julius Lester experienced a health decline in his final years due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which manifested as severe emphysema requiring hospitalization.[14] On January 3, 2018, he publicly acknowledged his deteriorating condition in a Facebook post, detailing the challenges posed by the illness.[67] Lester passed away on January 18, 2018, at age 78 in Belchertown, Massachusetts, from complications of COPD.[13] He was surrounded by family at the time of death, with his daughter Lian Amaris confirming the cause.[14] Family statements emphasized his peaceful passing without reported disputes or controversies in the immediate aftermath.[15]

Legacy

Enduring Contributions

Lester's retellings of African American folktales, published during the black power era, advanced folklore studies by centering black characters and revitalizing oral traditions for younger audiences, thereby preserving cultural narratives amid social upheaval.[68] His 1968 compilation To Be a Slave, drawing from first-person slave narratives, has sold nearly 500,000 copies in hardcover and paperback combined, establishing it as a foundational text for educational explorations of black history.[69] Photographs taken by Lester between 1964 and 1968 for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee document rural black life and civil rights activities in the South, with images archived and featured in exhibitions such as "The Black South Photographs (1966-1969)" at the Floyd Gallery in 2023, contributing visual evidence to ongoing historical analyses of the era.[15][70][17] Lester's post-1982 writings and lectures on black-Jewish relations, shaped by his conversion to Judaism, appear in academic works examining interracial dynamics, offering a contrarian framework that emphasizes mutual self-interest over ideological conformity.[71][72] These elements underscore his broader influence, with over 40 published books sustaining readership in cultural and educational contexts.[1]

Balanced Assessments of Impact

Lester's contributions to literature and cultural discourse have been lauded for fostering dialogue across racial and religious divides, particularly through his integration of African American folklore with Jewish themes, as evidenced by awards including the Newbery Honor and his role as a professor at the University of Massachusetts for over 30 years.[10][14] His critiques of ideological rigidities, such as anti-Semitism in black nationalist circles and the limitations of fixed ethnic identities, positioned him as a truth-seeker who prioritized individual moral reasoning over group orthodoxies.[10][8] Critics from leftist perspectives, including Afro-American studies colleagues, viewed his post-1960s evolution—marked by his 1982 conversion to Judaism and defense of Zionism—as a betrayal of black solidarity, culminating in his 1988 ouster from a university program after he denounced James Baldwin's anti-Semitic statements, with detractors branding him an "anti-Negro Negro."[14][10] Conversely, some Jewish observers criticized his earlier radical phase, such as a 1968 radio broadcast of a poem targeting union leader Albert Shanker amid a teachers' strike, interpreting it as anti-Semitic provocation despite his later embrace of Judaism.[10] These shifts highlighted perceptions of inconsistency in his radicalism, alienating purists on both sides who favored unwavering allegiance to identity-based causes.[8] Obituaries and analyses frame Lester's enduring impact as a cautionary example of identity politics' constraints, illustrating how overreliance on racial or ethnic categories can stifle personal growth and honest interracial reckoning, as seen in his defenses of fluid self-identification (e.g., paralleling Rachel Dolezal's case) and emphasis on shared human vulnerabilities over tribal dogmas.[10][14] While his work advanced nuanced understandings of Black-Jewish tensions—born of both alliance in civil rights and friction over anti-Semitism—his contrarianism often amplified divisions rather than resolving them, underscoring the challenges of causal realism in racially charged debates where empirical critique clashes with ideological loyalties.[8][10]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.