![]() ![]() John Rice mostly eschewed Martin Luther King Jr.’s brand of nonviolent resistance and even came to prefer the more militant ideas of Stokely Carmichael. ![]() But it’s her father who seems to have shaped her political beliefs. Rice credits her mother, a teacher, for pushing her in school. ![]() Rice’s father certainly looms large in his daughter’s account of her early life, said Stephen L. “Because of this experience,” Rice writes, “I’m a fierce defender of the Second Amendment and the right to bear arms.” What she doesn’t say is that the memory probably also explains why she eventually “trained to become an expert in the defense of her country.” Rice’s father, a Presbyterian minister, spent many nights after the bombing sitting on his porch with a gun, ready to defend his family and community if the Klan returned. ![]() Because the future secretary of state doesn’t tie that memory to her later career, a reader is forced to speculate. A native of Birmingham, Ala., Rice was just 9 in 1963 when a girl she knew was one of four killed in their Baptist church by an infamous Ku Klux Klan bombing. Condoleezza Rice’s understated new memoir begs to be read between the lines, said Darryl Lorenzo Wellington in The Christian Science Monitor. ![]()
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