Gandhi Hurwitz Launches Book Of Dreams Project
Released
on: May 19, 2009, 7:00 am
Author: Gandhi Hurwitz
Industry: Education
“All
that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do
nothing.” (Edmund Burke)
The
Book of Dreams is living testament to good people who chose
to act when the evil of slavery governed in America. Written by
American school children in the 21st century, it will tell the
stories of ordinary people, black and white, enslaved and free,
who tapped into deep waters and together worked to create safe
passage to freedom on the Underground Railroad for thousands of
American slaves. The Book’s creator, Gandhi Hurwitz, sees
the project as a way for children to understand that if their
ancestors could work together in such a tumultuous and primitive
world, so can they in today’s world.
Born
at the Steppingstone Museum in Havre de Grace, Maryland, the Book
of Dreams was “beaten out of the fire, carved out of wood”
by Steppingstone’s resident blacksmith, Tom Alexander, and
Masters of the Shop and woodworkers, Wade Whitlock and John Weifenbach,
with jointing by Joe Cambria. It is massive, structural, permanent.
Handcrafted entirely of iron and black walnut, it measures 30”x
36” x 9” and weighs in at about 60 lb. Visitors to
Steppingstone’s Fall Harvest Festival on September 23 and
24, 2006 will be able to watch these master craftsmen put the
final touches on the Book of Dreams, using traditional techniques
and hand- and foot-powered tools.
The Book of Dreams
will “visit” its first school during Black History
Month, in February 2007, where the students at Harford Friends
School in Darlington, Maryland will research local Underground
Railroad history and write Chapter One as a parent-led and expert
guest enrichment activity. Hurwitz, whose daughter Clairellen
attends the school, says he was inspired by local Quakers who
worked on the Railroad, including members of Deer Creek Meeting
where the school is located. (The previous Meetinghouse in Darlington
is believed to have been burned down by arsonists who objected
to Quakers’ antislavery activities.)
After
leaving Harford Friends, the Book will travel far and wide to
schools along Railroad routes in Maryland and beyond, perhaps
circulating as far south as North Carolina. Students from each
school will research local Railroad history and write a Book chapter.
Each chapter will be recorded on a large sheet of archival cotton
paper and entered into the Book. Hurwitz has invited Tamika Hudson,
an actor and Harriet Tubman interpreter, to contribute a written
piece in Tubman’s voice. After the Book has circulated,
it will return to its permanent repository at Harford Friends
School where 8th grade students will write the last chapter as
part of their year-long study of Harford County and American history.
Hurwitz
calls Steppingstone the perfect birthplace for the
Book of Dreams. Located on the site of a Quaker family farm
believed to have been a station on the Underground Railroad, Steppingstone
is a living history museum and interpretive center of American
farm life near the Mason-Dixon line. Hurwitz found receptive partners
when he first presented his vision to Steppingstone’s Director,
Linda Noll, its board of directors and craftsmen. Under the Museum’s
sponsorship, the craftsmen – all volunteers – have
dedicated dozens of hours to building the Book.
The
Book’s striking appearance was inspired by a design created
by Clairellen Hurwitz. Two wrought iron, life-size arms –
one shackled and skeletal, the other unshackled – reach
across the Books’ black walnut cover. They are connected
by a railroad track. A hand-carved rendering of the African continent
rises out of the wood. A burnished iron North Star sits near the
top. “Book of Dreams” is boldly embossed along the
Book’s iron spine. You can view photographs of the Book
on the project’s website: www.bookofdreamsproject.org
Contact Details: www.bookofdreamsproject.org