When They Call You a Terrorist

A Black Lives Matter Memoir

272 pages

English language

Published Feb. 27, 2019 by Canongate Books.

ISBN:
978-1-78689-305-5
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4 stars (4 reviews)

Following the acquittal of George Zimmerman in the fatal shooting of Trayvon Martin, three women – Alicia Garza, Opal Tometi, and Patrisse Khan-Cullors – came together to form an active response to the systemic racism causing the deaths of so many African-Americans. They simply said: Black Lives Matter; and for that, they were labelled terrorists.

In this empowering account of survival, strength and resilience, Patrisse Khan-Cullors and award-winning author and journalist asha bandele recount the personal story that led Patrisse to become a founder of Black Lives Matter, seeking to end the culture that declares Black life expendable. Like the era-defining movement she helped create, this rallying cry demands you do not look away.

10 editions

A very readable and powerful work

4 stars

Prior to spotting this autobiography in Amazon's recommended reads for me, I had never given much thought to how the Black Lives Matter movement had actually started or to the individuals who had been inspired to first shout the compelling slogan. In When They Call You A Terrorist, Patrisse Khan-Cullors recollects her impoverished childhood and the years of blatant racial injustice which gave her the impetus to bravely stand up firstly for herself and her tribe, then for black people across America and the world.

When They Call You A Terrorist is a very readable and powerful work. Khan-Cullors writes with such clarity and vision that I would struggle to believe anyone would not be moved by her words. That the double standards practiced by the police, judiciary and politicians across America are intended to continue a form of Jim Crow segregation and provide ultra cheap labour for greedy corporations …

Review of 'When They Call You a Terrorist' on Goodreads

4 stars

"The war on drugs is ethnic cleansing." A near-perfect of-the-moment memoir, the author opens her rich personal family scars of poverty and incarceration - heart-wrenching and balanced with her memories of constructing love and belonging in family, the ones you're born into and the ones you intentionally create - to clear analysis of the systemic ways that black lives and black family security is devalued in America especially in her LA childhood of the 80s and 90s. A solid personal companion for Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow. Community self-determination is probably the clearest demand she articulates, beyond simple compassion for the humans our system actively destroys from childhood.

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5 stars
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4 stars

Subjects

  • Civil rights, united states
  • Political activists
  • African american women
  • African americans, biography
  • Social movements
  • African americans, politics and government
  • Women, united states, biography