Thomas Norman DeWolf

Red Tails – the film even George Lucas almost couldn’t make

Thumbnail image for Red Tails – the film even George Lucas almost couldn’t make by Thomas Norman DeWolf January 26, 2012

George Lucas, producer director of some of the most profitable films in Hollywood history (Star Wars, Indiana Jones, etc), has been working on Red Tails, an action-packed, special effects-laden World War II movie for 23 years. He paid for it himself. He figured a studio would eventually come in and pay for distribution and publicity. [...]

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Resurrecting Love: The Cemetery That Can Heal a Nation

Thumbnail image for Resurrecting Love: The Cemetery That Can Heal a Nation by Thomas Norman DeWolf December 6, 2011

Sharon and I both love cemeteries. One important aspect of the work we’ve committed ourselves to along our healing journey involves burial grounds. We both turn our heads to check them out when we pass them in our cars. We’ll walk through them and read headstones whether we have relatives buried there or not. Over [...]

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The Problem We All Live With

Thumbnail image for The Problem We All Live With by Thomas Norman DeWolf September 1, 2011

Thank you to my Coming to the Table friends Sharon Morgan and Edie Lee Harris for sharing this story. In 1960, a 6-year old African American girl named Ruby Bridges was escorted by federal marshals into an elementary school in New Orleans after integration became the law of the land. In 1963 Norman Rockwell captured [...]

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Uncle Tom

Thumbnail image for Uncle Tom by Thomas Norman DeWolf August 4, 2011

More than fifteen years ago I walked from my office to a local elementary school once each week to read with a little first grade boy for half an hour to help increase his reading skills. That little boy is now a bright young man in college. When he found out that I was reading [...]

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Teardrops on the City

Thumbnail image for Teardrops on the City by Thomas Norman DeWolf June 29, 2011

White man with a guitar leans on black man playing a saxophone. Both are dressed in black and white clothes. White album cover. Everything about the Born to Run album cover is black and white. Very little about Bruce Springsteen and Clarence Clemons was. They didn’t make an issue over a black man playing in [...]

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Looking for America

Thumbnail image for Looking for America by Thomas Norman DeWolf June 8, 2011

Friday, May 20, 12:51 pm, Denver, Colorado I sit in the airport after my first two flights today; one more to go to arrive in New York where Sharon will pick me up at La Guardia. We begin our 5,700 mile road trip through 15 states this weekend — mostly in the South and Midwest. [...]

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This Precious Moment

Thumbnail image for This Precious Moment by Thomas Norman DeWolf May 25, 2011

“We have a fuel leak on the right side of the plane. We need to evacuate.” The pilot’s voice got everyone’s attention. I heard the word “evacuate” but wasn’t sure about the rest of what he said through the distortion in the sound system. I turned toward the man and woman sitting next to me [...]

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Lorraine Motel, 43 Years On

Thumbnail image for Lorraine Motel, 43 Years On by Thomas Norman DeWolf April 6, 2011

April 4, 2011, was the 43rd anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Memphis, Tennessee. Two years ago I attended the White Privilege Conference in Memphis. My conference roommate Michael and I, along with two students at the college where he works, drove downtown to the Lorraine Motel, now home to [...]

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A love of cemeteries

Thumbnail image for A love of cemeteries by Thomas Norman DeWolf March 2, 2011

My whole life I’ve loved cemeteries. Some people find that morbid. I find it fascinating and life-affirming. I’ve been known to pull off the road while driving just to check out a cemetery we encounter. Reading random headstones fires the imagination. I ran across John T. Dana’s headstone in a small cemetery in Massachusetts in [...]

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Excising the “n” word from Huckleberry Finn

Thumbnail image for Excising the “n” word from Huckleberry Finn by Thomas Norman DeWolf February 9, 2011

Mark Twain defined a “classic” book as one “which people praise and don’t read.” He should know. How many of you have read Huckleberry Finn? This “classic” has been condemned, banned, or people attempted to ban it, in a variety of locations, and for various reasons, since it was first published in 1885. Back then [...]

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