The Promise, by Oral Lee Brown

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Keeping the Promise In her book The Promise, Oral Lee Brown discusses how she set out with the intention of helping one little girl and ended up changing the lives of twenty three children. She starts her narrative with a description of a child whose poverty worried her so much that her face haunted her dreams, and recounts how her search for the child brought her to Brookfield Elementary where she adopted a first grade class with the promise of sending them all to college if they graduated high school. The book discusses the influences in her life that led her to do what she did, as well as the struggles that came with trying to help so many children with her own limited resources. In the first chapter of the book called “The Education of Oral Lee Brown”, she explains how her early life in rural Mississippi helped to shape her later decisions in many ways. In the book, she describes how working the cotton fields with her family taught her discipline as well as how to manage with very little. She discusses Miss Grace, the elementary school teacher who inspired her to seek an education in hopes of a better life. Brown also recounts an incident in her childhood—when the local sheriff beat her brothers and her father decided not to pursue a lawsuit against him—that made such an impact on her that it changed the way she looked at the state that she grew up in as well as her view of her father as a man. Seeing her family’s opportunity to make a difference in the community turned down because her father feared the inevitable backlash made Brown and her brothers angry enough to do whatever they needed to do to leave Mississippi. It also gave her the determination not to miss another chance to make a difference in the communi... ... middle of paper ... ...ce and the struggle to achieve academic success in inner city public schools. The book looks beyond statistics that show the impact of the drug trade in communities like Oakland and into the lives of families that are most affected. Though the book’s intention is not to analyze the effects of the loss of jobs, teenage pregnancy and lack of parental involvement, it successfully does that and more as it presents the stories of these young people who have had to overcome all of those issues and more. This story should serve as an inspiration to anyone who wants to make a difference in their communities, as well as to anyone who wants to change their own situations. Reference Brown, O. & Millner C. (2007). The promise: how one woman made good on her extraordinary pact to send a classroom of 1st graders to college (Kindle ed.). New York, NY: Doubleday.

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