10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This book should be at the top of your reading wish list, July 2, 2003
This review is from: My Heart Will Cross This Ocean: My Story, My Son, Amadou (Hardcover)
In most instances, books about crime victims - especially if they're black - get pegged into all the wrong categories and are marketed to all the wrong demographic groups until years later such books are discussed earnestly only in college "African Studies" programs.
"My Heart Will Cross This Ocean," by Kadiatou Diallo and Craig Wolff, deserves a better fate. It deserves to be read and re-read by every man, woman and - yes, young person - on this planet.
Americans, and especially New Yorkers, will immediately recognize the Diallo name from news reports. Kadiatou's son Amadou, in a horrific case of mistaken identity, was inexplicably shot 40 times by New York City cops in 1999 in the foyer of the Bronx apartment building where he lived. The police officers were tried and acquitted of any wrongdoing, and for many who followed the tragedy, it was "case closed."
Who knew from the papers and broadcast news that this sensitive and hard-working young man was descended from West African kings and healers? Who talked about his inner beauty or quiet religious convictions? Who spoke of his dreams and aspirations?
Most of us know John Donne's now famous quote: "No man is an island, entire of itself. Every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. Any man's death diminishes me because I'm involved in mankind, and therefore, never send to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee."
Thus, the challenge for the authors was profound. It was not just to make us empathize with an innocent murder victim from Guinea, West Africa, or to give us insight into a mother's unspeakable grief, but it was to resurrect a mother and son's life story before it was irrevocably severed in a hail of bullets.
The book's preface says it all.
"When a young person leaves home from Guinea, he becomes the sette. He is the explorer and the envoy, carrying the family name to unseen places. In the villages, towns, and cities, too, they will talk about him. On his return, they will gauge his manner of speaking or of entering a room, the ease of his walk, perhaps a satisfaction that shows in his eyes, to determine if his travels have given him the bearing of a successful man. Beyond his conquests, they will wait for the tales he will carry back... For years he can tell people what happened when finally he stepped onto strange land, what surprised or scared him, lifted or saddened him, what he has discovered for them. Amadou was the sette for his brothers, sisters, cousins, friends, and for me, who anticipated a magnificent return.
"He returned, a silent body with a tale untold. If there is anything as cruel as the taking of a man's life, it is the taking away of his story, the particulars that make him holy. The mother who dreams that she can undo any harm that comes to her child, dreams fruitlessly. The one last thing she can do is to try to give her child back his story, the greatest and least obligation she can fulfill."
Kadiatou's life story is yours and mine. It is amazing, and Wolff's writing gives her story the wings to soar. This book is outstanding from start to finish. Fine literature? It's in every word. Superb storytelling? You will cry and laugh, and shake your head that one woman's journey could so affect your soul. Political intrigue; the bonds of love and family; the strange contradictions and rhythms of marriage and parenthood - of living and dying - are all here, written with such clarity and purpose that by the close of the book, Kadi's family has become yours - and you hate to see them go.
This book proves once and for all that Diallo's death did diminish each one of us, and, therefore, we owe it to ourselves to pick up these pages and resurrect his soul.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
interesting, July 13, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: My Heart Will Cross This Ocean: My Story, My Son, Amadou (Hardcover)
An interesting story of a mother, her history, her life, her struggles and success. Being a daughter, a wife, a mother, a provider. I enjoyed the book. I find though that the book was more about her and less about Amadou. SO if your intent is to read about Amadou there is not too much. I recommend it though. GOd Bless her and her family. She is an inspiration to the African (muslim) woman and others too. I feel her pain as I am also a mother.
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