Foreword
By: Alma
Buenavista
Oakland Public
School Teacher
With so much to
say about Rubin Scott’s book, It Takes a Village, if I had to choose one word
to encapsulate the essence I would say: inspiring. Rubin Scott unpacks the
harsh realities of growing up in an impoverished community and presents it to
the reader in all its entirety of beauty and strife. He takes the reader on an emotional and
visceral journey with his autobiography.
Captivating your
attention from the first line, “I must admit that I’m truly unsure exactly when
the first internal notion of death I had occurred”, It Takes a Village, is a
quick read. To say “quick-read” does
not, by any means indicate superficial – like the author, the book has great
depth and insight.
I first met
Rubin Scott in the mid to late ‘80s as a middle school boy. Just as he portrays himself in the book, I
remember him as kind, vibrant, loyal, shy yet personable in the same moment,
and most of all strong. I emphasize
strong because at that time, I wasn’t aware of the hardships he was
experiencing; he never let it show. It
wasn’t until decades later, as an adult, that he shared with me the adversities
of his childhood and adulthood, still conducting himself with great integrity
and strength.
As a public
school teacher in Oakland, California, I have shared excerpts of the manuscript
with my students. I have watched young
boys, many who dislike and struggle with reading and writing, come to life as
they relate to the stories. They are
encouraged that someone from their own community wrote this book and motivated
to advance their reading in order to be able to read the book in its
entirety. Like seeds of courage
blossoming, they ask about the process of publishing your own book. After
listening to or reading parts like “Girls Rule” they laugh and agree; digesting
passages from “Valedictorian” they are still and pensive, only to be rekindled
with warm emotions as the book talks about the strength of a mother’s love.
My students are
not the only ones touched by this book.
Scott beautifully renders the world of the impoverished communities he
grew up in, with a raw honesty that illustrates tragedy, beauty, hope and
strength. He illuminates how his
community was portrayed from an outsider’s point of view versus how it was
truly like on the inside.
Beginning with
the voice of a young child that grows into a strong, soul-searching man, he
lays out his life for you in complete vulnerability and raw honesty, without
telling you what to think or how to feel.
The story is provocative and poignant.
Like a friend sitting down with you on the porch to share his life
story, Scott opens up his world and allows you to journey with him.
It is a book
that you will find yourself re-reading and discovering new questions within
yourself. Although Scott’s target
audience are young men in impoverished communities, as a mother and an educator
I found myself connecting to and learning from the stories on multiple
levels. Throughout the book, I cried,
laughed and was angered by the stories yet in the end I was struck with a
profound sense of inspiration. Rubin
Scott truly sheds light on the meaning behind the phrase “It takes a
village”.
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