How we cite our quotes: (Chapter.Paragraph)
Quote #7
I continued to absorb as much wisdom as I could during the study sessions with the older brothers. We called these sessions "building," because their point was to help us construct new lives for ourselves based on spiritual and cultural principles of reciprocity, love, and compassion. "No matter what you do while you are in here," Baruti would tell me, "never give up on learning and trying to be a better person." I didn't always listen to him, but over the years, I would find all that he shared with me to be of great value.(14.39)
Baruti is himself a great example of someone who keeps learning and trying to be a better person while in prison. Strong role models like Baruti, whom he meets through a Black Muslim group, help to give Shaka hope that he can be the man he wants to be.
Quote #8
I will never forget how the brothers in the library embraced me when they saw that I came consistently to check out books. Whenever a new title arrived by a Black author, they would hold it for me, and eventually it got to the point where anytime I showed up, they would already have books picked out for me. The brothers made me give detailed reports on the books they gave me, in part because they wanted to know whether they were worth reading, but also because they wanted to make sure I had read them myself. It was because of the wise counsel of Baruti and the other brothers, and the way they challenged me to think, that I was able to leave prison with a sense of purpose.(14.40)
This section is a great example of how reading about Black history and culture and participating in a community of other Black brothers work together in Shaka's life. Both the books and the community help Shaka to develop his purpose in life.
Quote #9
This wasn't the first time I had witnessed this superiority complex that white officers carry on their chest like badges. In fact, even the officers who professed to have no racial prejudices were prone to exact revenge on a Black inmate if they thought he had gotten over on them. (18.14)
Shaka's harsh experience in prison suggests that people aren't always as free of prejudice as they think.