Skip to main content
Dancing with History: A Life for Peace and Justice

Dancing with History: A Life for Peace and Justice

Current price: $22.95
Publication Date: December 6th, 2022
Publisher:
Seven Stories Press
ISBN:
9781644212356
Pages:
400

Description

A memoir of a Quaker activist and master storyteller on his involvement in struggles for peace, civil rights, LGBTQ rights, labor justice, and the environment, whose life will be the subject of a new documentary film coming in 2023.

From his first arrest in the Civil Rights era to his most recent during a climate justice march at the age of 83, George Lakey has committed his life to a mission of building a better world through movements for justice. Lakey draws readers into the center of history-making events, telling often serious stories with playfulness and intimacy. In this memoir, he describes the personal, political, and theoretical—coming out as bisexual to his Quaker community while known as a church leader and family man, protesting against the war in Vietnam by delivering medical supplies through the naval blockade in the South China Sea, and applying his academic study of nonviolent resistance to creative tactics in direct action campaigns.
 
From strategies he learned as a young man facing violence in the streets to risking his life as an unarmed bodyguard for Sri Lankan human rights lawyers, Lakey recounts his experience living out the tension between commitment to family and mission. Drawing strength from his community to fight cancer, survive painful parenting struggles, and create networks to help prevent activist burnout, this book shows readers how to find hope in even the darkest times through strategic, joyful activism.

About the Author

GEORGE LAKEY was born into a white working-class family in a small town in rural Pennsylvania and has been active in direct action campaigns for seven decades. Recently retired from Swarthmore College, where he was the Eugene M. Lang Visiting Professor for Issues of Social Change, Lakey was first arrested at a civil rights demonstration in March 1963, and his most recent arrest was in June 2021, during a climate justice march. A Quaker, he has been named Peace Educator of the Year and was given the Paul Robeson Social Justice Award and the Martin Luther King Peace Award. His previous books include Viking Economics: How the Scandinavians Got It Right—and How We Can, Too and How We Win: A Guide to Nonviolent Direct Action Campaigning. He lives in Philadelphia.
 

Praise for Dancing with History: A Life for Peace and Justice

"George Lakey stands out for the sheer range of his contributions to peace and justice, especially in strategy and theory, organizing, innovative and risky actions, and teaching and training others.  His upbeat, soul-driven spirit underlies it all, as you’ll catch in this revealing memoir."
Daniel Ellsberg, former U.S. military analyst who released The Pentagon Papers in 1971,  peace activist and author

"Almost no one I can think of has made better use of their time on earth—and George Lakey just keeps going. This book is equal parts illuminating and inspiring!"
—Bill McKibben, author of The Flag, the Cross, and the Station Wagon: A Graying American Looks Back at His Suburban Boyhood and Wonders What the Hell Happened

"This is a rare memoir that not only engages the reader, but forces one to think about how we can be more effective agents for change. Lakey was well ahead of his time on many of the seminal political struggles since the 1950s, but he repeatedly emphasizes that being right is not enough—you also have to think strategically. For example, while committed to pacifism as a personal ethic, he also acknowledges the critical importance of recognizing the strategic advantages of nonviolent action. And his stories underscore the importance that nonviolent action campaigns be as well-planned, creative, and tactical as military or electoral campaigns." Stephen Zunes, The Progressive

“I have been waiting for years for George Lakey to write a memoir. Now it has arrived, and we are blessed with his reflections on a career that weaves through an improbably expansive list of the last century’s major social movements, recounting George’s contributions to civil rights, anti-war, pro-democracy, LGBTQ liberation, labor, and environmental causes. This book is a marvelous account of a life filled with organizing for peace, justice, and freedom. It has been well worth the wait."
—Mark Engler, journalist and co-author of This Is an Uprising: How Nonviolent Revolt Is Shaping the Twenty-First Century


“George Lakey is a national treasure, whom I met when I was 22. Dancing with George was a blast.  His unstoppable, thoughtful, contagious approach to democratic action has inspired my life’s work.  It’s a story Americans need now more than ever.”  —Frances Moore Lappé, author, Diet for a Small Planet, Director, Small Planet Institute

“George Lakey’s memoir is an epic of the personal in flow with the political – a dance with history indeed!  As such, it is an outstanding example in the rich tradition of Quaker spiritual autobiography.”  — Doug Gwyn, author of A Sustainable Life: Quaker Faith & Practice in the Renewal of Creation

“Dancing with History packs a powerful, honest, and deeply personal account of George Lakey’s remarkable life and legacy of family building and movement building, honoring identity and liberation for all, ‘raising the temperature’ on what it means to live a life of social action and bearing witness.  This book is a stunning testimonial, like walking through a historical landscape of a life of turning courageously to meet what’s next.” —Valerie Brown, writer, Buddhist-Quaker Dharma teacher, leadership coach, and facilitator 

“It is hard to express the depth of gratitude I have for the elders of social movements—people who have committed their lifetimes to cultivating the skills, frameworks, ideas, and ideologies that provide the foundation for activism today. George Lakey stands tall among these leaders. He will, I believe, go down as one of the great elders of the American radical democratic tradition. George is an expert in both building prefigurative community and planning strategic action. He is a master of pedagogy and a core resource for organizers thinking about how to train social movement participants. Countless grassroots leaders throughout the country are honored to claim him as a mentor. George provides a model of radical living—of how to sustain a life of commitment. His story is wonderfully presented in this autobiography.” —Paul Engler, Director, Center for the Working Poor in Los Angeles, co-founder, Momentum Training, co-author, This Is An Uprising.

“George Lakey shows us how to ignite positive change in the face of adversity.  He weaves in passion, creativity, faith, and even humor. An inspiring read for our moment.”  —Dave Bleakney, Education Director for the Canadian Union of Postal Workers  

“George is a true elder, one who shows up to support the diverse, youth-led nonviolent direct action campaigns of today.” —Sarah Nahar, scholar/activist, interspiritual theologian, direct action trainer

"George Lakey is a hero, but not the kind that wears a cape or stands on mountaintops declaring victory. He's one of those quiet, tireless heroes who doesn't think of himself as a hero. George is simply living his life the way he knows a life should be lived—steadily, lovingly, bravely, joyfully, honestly, and with an absolutely unmatchable excitement for life. He has spent his life fighting for freedom—for himself and for all of us—and this book, full of adventures and lessons, is still only a snapshot of that, but more than enough to remind us of what is important: That we can be heroes too." —Yotam Marom, facilitator, organizer, and writer
 
“George reminds us that ‘you can’t beat somebody with nobody’ and he has been a somebody for countless justice, peace and social movements.  This book invites action rooted in deep listening, inserted in community, and inspired by love.” 
—Kathi Bentall, retreat facilitator and spiritual director, Rivendell Retreat Centre, Bowen Island, Canada

"This is a rare memoir that not only engages the reader, but forces one to think about how we can be more effective agents for change. Lakey was well ahead of his time on many of the seminal political struggles since the 1950s, but he repeatedly emphasizes that being right is not enough—you also have to think strategically. For example, while committed to pacifism as a personal ethic, he also acknowledges the critical importance of recognizing the strategic advantages of nonviolent action. And his stories underscore the importance that nonviolent action campaigns be as well-planned, creative, and tactical as military or electoral campaigns." —Stephen Zunes, The Progressive