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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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SGT (Join to see) great novelist and playwright activist, whom dedicated so much for so many.
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
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Go Tell it on the Mountain was a high school reading assignment.
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SGT English/Language Arts Teacher
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I liked his writings. They were not all kumbaya about everything in the US being great. There were some harsh realities to face in his writings.
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SPC Benjamin Hartog
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Sgt. Baldwin,

It is somewhat ironic that you mention James Baldwin. I recently finished a biography of him and walked away impressed by his persistent commitment to pointing out the plight of Blacks in America especially in the South where "Jim Crow' remained an unadulterated way of life for negroes. I also completed a comparative study of Baldwin, Faulkner and Truman Capote who like him was also homosexual but unencumbered by the racial stigma that Baldwin endured. Both Faulkner and Capote had roots in the South but Capote, as far as I can determine, did not overly concern himself with white racism and other Negro artist and writers and activist like MLK, Malcolm X, Richard Wright, Paul Robeson and Ralph Ellison. Baldwin's extended life in Paris also distinguished him as an expatriate novelist and where he was not besieged by racial denigration and besmirchment that seemed to demoralize him while he lived in the United States. I fantasied how Baldwin would have conducted himself in the "Back to Africa Movement" led by Marcus Garvy. Baldwin was not a Separatist like Elijah Mohammed of the Black Muslims. He wanted to live in an integrated society where Whites and Blacks would live in perpetual harmony and eschewed any notion of resettling American negroes to Liberia. Africa endured over a 100 years of colonization mostly by the British, French and Belgians (The Congo) and Baldwin did not relish the prospect of "colonizing" another African nation with displaced American negroes. It has been been over 40 years since I read any of Baldwin's literary cannon but I never found his novels to be as compelling as I did Faulkner and Capote especially "In Cold Blood" which I thought was a staggering work unexcelled historical reportage. I tried to compare it to "Crime and Punishment" and "House of the Dead" but I discovered that Dostoyevsky has no peers in the annals of Western literature including Zola whose book "Nana" about a debauched Parisian courtesan and voluptuary is a masterpiece of social realism. Perhaps I should revisit Baldwin and read "A Fire Next Time" in my dotage and rediscover him as a spokesman for the downtrodden as a testament for any oppressed people irrespective of the historical circumstances in which they exist. I wish I would have had the opportunity to interview him in the 1968 after I returned from Vietnam and garnered his opinion on the Holocaust as a terminal plantation system for another persecuted group of people. I wonder how he would have reacted to Obama if he had been alive during his Presidency. Anyway, thank you for allowing me to articulate my refections on Baldwin and I wish you well. Your knowledge of history is impressive and I am grateful for the opportunity to communicate with you. SPC Benjamin
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