Program rooted in civil rights movement

Erin Richards:

The children crouched like bushes rooted in the church’s sanctuary and waited for the music.
Then they rose alongside their instructors, lifted their arms and sang Labi Siffre’s 1980s anti-apartheid anthem as it boomed through the stereo system:
“The higher you build your barriers, the taller I become
The farther you take my rights away, the faster I will run…”
It’s the last week of Wisconsin’s only Freedom School, but the morning group exercise of singing, clapping, stomping, hugging and chanting is the same as it’s been every day for the past several weeks at All Peoples Church, 2600 N. 2nd St. It’s also the same way Freedom School has begun this summer at 145 other sites around the country.
Administered nationally by the Children’s Defense Fund nonprofit advocacy group in Washington, D.C., Freedom Schools aim to teach kids from first grade through high school to fall in love with reading. The six-week summer program is rooted in the civil rights movement of the 1960s, so reading is seen more broadly as a way to empower low-income and minority youth, to instill them with the education, confidence and tolerance necessary to succeed and help others.