An unexpected detour can change the course of our lives forever, and, for white American anthropologist Margaret Willson, a stopover in Brazil led to immersion in a kaleidoscopic world of street urchins, capoeiristas, drug dealers, and wise teachers. She and African Brazilian activist Rita Conceicao joined forces to break the cycles of poverty and violence around them by pledging local residents they would create a top-quality educational program for girls. From 1991 to the graduation of Bahia Street's first college-bound graduate in 2005, Willson and Conceicao 's adventure took them to the shantytowns of Brazil's Northeast, high-society London, and urban Seattle.
In a narrative brimming with honesty and grace, Dance Lest We All Fall Down unfolds the story of this remarkable alliance, showing how friendship, when combined with courage, insight, and passion, can transform dreams of a better world into reality.
Watch the book trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KVXj44o3rVE
Table of Contents:
Acknowledgments
Part One Learning to Dance
1. Seduction
2. The First Return
3. Agnaldo and Candomble
4. Letting Salvador Inside
5. Learning to Dance
6. A Dangerous Embrace
7. Marginals
8. Sex and Friendship
9. Rain
10. Burnt Knives
11. A Stranger
Part Two Treading Water
12. Encountering Seattle
13. Ideas
14. Life Change
15. Letting the Outer Skin Be Social
16. Of Race and Remembrance
17. More Sides of Bahia
18. A View Into the Abyss
19. Power and Presence
20. Trust
21. Tall Poppy
22. A Shadowed Color of Shade
Part Three Laughter Lessons
23. Leaves of Understanding
24. Love
25. Barriers of Glass
26. Storms
27. Sharing a Lifeboat
28. Heartbreak
29. Evolution
30. Resting on the Wings of a Butterfly
Afterword
About the Author :
-John Collins , Anthropology, City University of New York
Review :
"The book is accessible to a broad range of readers. . . Although Dance Lest We All Fall Down should not be read as an ABC of starting an NGO, the book certainly provides invaluable inspiration, reflection, and ideas on how to proceed."
- Marit Ursin (Journal of Latin American Studies) "An emotionally affecting book. It makes a strong case for local empowerment. . ."
(The Bookmonger) "… Margaret Willson's story about founding a school for poor girls in a favela in Salvador, Brazil, combines Eat, Pray, Love's romantic self-discoveries with the can-do idealism of Three Cups of Tea."
(Crosscut.com) "a text written passionately, sincerely, and sentimentally; all in the very best sense of all these terms. To understand Bahia, one needs mandinga, mischievousness, and the ability to interpret the true meaning of a smile…. Capoeira, a form of combat that is also a dance, is a fine metaphor for Willson's struggles to feel, to change, and to represent Bahia…. Margaret Willson, Rita Conceicao, and the girls of Bahia Street became experts in how to learn and how to teach such lessons."
(The Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology)