“Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom” by Carole Boston Weatherford

6:52 am Historical Fiction

Book Cover  Harriet Tubman is a woman who talks to God and hears His voice in the whip-poor-will’s song and the owl’s screech, and sees His face in the reflection of the moon on the creek, and in other forms of nature as He directs her away from the inhumane treatment inflicted upon her as a slave at the mercy of a cruel master and toward being the Moses of her people as a conductor in the Underground Railroad.  The Underground Railroad consisted of sites that offered safe havens for runaway slaves on their flight to freedom in the North and were operated by abolitionists, people who wanted to legally do away with slavery because they felt that it was inherently wrong.

Prayers and Negro spirituals were important in the lives of the enslaved, as in Harriet’s life.  The prayers provided direction and solace and the spirituals contained words which were codes understood only by the oppressed.

When Harriet arrived in Philadelphia, the freedom which had been granted to her through God’s guidance was instrumental in her quest to return to the South and lead her family to the freedom that she now enjoyed.  She would make many more treks back to the South and would lead as many as three hundred slaves to freedom. 

This powerfully written Caldecott Honor book features some of Harriet Tubman’s possible conversations with God.  It also allows the reader to learn of the guiding force that directs one’s life when he or she allows himself or herself to be used in the way that God sees fit.  Athough this book is only a fictionalized account of a factual and historical truth, the author’s note at the end provides a brief and accurate biographical sketch of Harriet Tubman’s life. 

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