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Seeds of Fire:

An interview with Ash-lee Wooddard Henderson and Rev. Allyn Maxfield-Steele

In this podcast the two new co-executive directors of Highlander* share their visions for the Center. They take us through the basics of popular education and the importance of communities defining “what is and what ought to be” in their local situations, while building coalitions with other resistance movements.

*The Highlander Research and Education Center has been at the heart of popular education and social change. In 1932 Myles and Zilphia Horton, Don West, and others founded the Highlander Folk School in Monteagle, Tennessee as a place of cultural memory and organizing, participatory action research, and racial, economic, and environmental justice. Highlander has been causing beautiful trouble since its training of union leaders in the 1930s on, in its first interracial workshop in 1944, through its involvement in the civil rights movement and citizenship schools in the 1950s and 60s, and its support of movement building for groups working for justice and human rights in southern Appalachia and beyond.

resources

The Highlander Research and Education Center: http://highlandercenter.org/

Project South: Institute for the Elimination of Poverty and Genocide: http://projectsouth.org/