Blacks, Jews and the Struggle
to Integrate Brooklyn's Junior High
School 258: A Cold War Story
ADINA
BACK
IF YOU MENTION BROOKLYN, schools, blacks and Jews in one breath, the image
that surfaces in the minds of many is the 1968 struggle for community
control in the Ocean Hill-Brownsville school district. Like many highly
publicized events, the Ocean Hill-Brownsville struggle has generally been
presented by the media and some of the key players as having come out
of nowhere, an explosion without a history. But the Ocean Hill-Brownsville
struggle had its roots in an earlier and less well-publicized history
of struggles for equal education for African- American schoolchildren.
In the 1950s, many black parents redirected their energies from documenting
discrimination to organizing for integration. In so doing, they exposed
a segregated northern school system. Paradoxically, their campaign revealed
both the possibility that existed during this period to create a truly
integrated system, and the deep— ultimately intractable—resistance
to that goal.
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