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The Color of Life

A Journey toward Love and Racial Justice

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In this spiritual memoir, a white woman in an interracial marriage and mixed-race family paints a beautiful path from white privilege toward racial healing, from ignorance toward seeing the image of God in everyone she meets.

Author and speaker Cara Meredith grew up in a colorless world. From childhood, she didn't think issues of race had anything to do with her, and she was ignorant of many of the racial realities (including individual and systemic racism) in America today. A colorblind rhetoric had been stamped across her education, world view, and Christian theology.

Then as an adult, Cara's life took on new, colorful hues. She realized that white people in her generation, seeking to move beyond ancestral racism, had swung so far in believing a colorblind rhetoric that they tried to act as if they didn't see race at all.

When Cara met and fell in love with the son of black icon, James Meredith, the power of love helped her see color. She began to notice the shades of life already present in the world around her, while also learning to listen in new ways to black voices of the past. After she married and their little family grew to include two mixed-race sons, Cara knew she would never see the world through a colorless lens again.

Cara Meredith's journey will serve as an invitation into conversations of justice, race, and privilege, asking key questions, such as:

  • What does it mean to navigate ongoing and desperately needed conversations of race and justice?
  • What does it mean for white people to listen and learn from the realities our black and brown brothers and sisters face every day?
  • What does it mean to teach the next generation a theology of justice, reconciliation, and love?
  • What does it mean to dig into the stories of our past, both historically and theologically, to see the imago Dei in everyone?
  • Plus, Cara offers an extensive Notes and Recommended Reading section at the end of the book, so you can continue learning, listening, and engaging in this important conversation.

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      • Booklist

        February 1, 2019
        Meredith draws on her interviews with her father-in-law, who asks her, Why are you writing this book? She replies, Because white people need to understand that issues of race have something to do with them. Because stories of interracial marriage and biracial children are few and far between. Meredith is white; her father-in-law is James Howard Meredith, the Black man who integrated the University of Mississippi as its first Black student, in 1963. Cara, who works for a church ministry, meets James' son, who works for a corporation, through an online dating site. Meredith's memoir recounts their courtship and her experiences as a young wife in an interracial marriage looking for approval from her parents, in-laws, and friends in a sharply divided country that gives rise to the Black Lives Matter movement. She also reflects on the early years of their two sons and her efforts to understand the complexities of their mixed-race heritage. Her father-in-law tells her he'll answer her questions for his grandsons, but every reader will benefit from this candid family story.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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    • English

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