BOOKS MENTIONED IN THIS ARTICLE:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 271 pp., $16.95 (paper)
Oxford University Press, 438 pp., $19.95
New York University Press, 274 pp., $35.00
Free Press, 423 pp., $24.95
University of Missouri Press, 366 pp., $34.95
Henry Holt, 277 pp., $12.95 (paper)
In 1963, at the time of Martin Luther King Jr.'s March on Washington, it was assumed by many American liberals that Jews and African-Americans were natural allies, a belief seemingly confirmed when a disproportionate number of Jewish students participated in the Freedom Summer of the following year. Yet by 1995, when Louis Farrakhan led his Million Man March, the conventional view held that Jewish and black communities were divided by deeply rooted conflicts. In the spring of 1996 Howard University and the American Jewish Committee, in a desperate attempt to promote 'mutual understanding and a just society,' launched the admirable CommonQuest: The Magazine of Black- Jewish Relations. The first issue reviewed Murray Friedman's book What Went Wrong? The Creation and Collapse of the Black-Jewish Alliance.[1]
Review, 5889 words
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