It’s Women’s History Month and author Dr. Camesha Whittaker is on a mission to teach Black history and universal differences. Her book “Eleanor Roosevelt and Mary McLeod Bethune: An Unusual Friendship” proposes civility as an essential core value and remedy for advancing better relationships as a means to realizing greater societal progress.
Whittaker is a former student government president at Bethune-Cookman University — the school founded by Mary McLeod Bethune. Whittaker is currently an associate professor there and director of the BJ Moore Center for Faculty Innovation.
Bethune, a Black educator, and Roosevelt, a white universal civic leader, met in 1927 during one of the most racially divisive times in America.
Whittaker hopes the book will guide people on how they can work together, live together, learn together and put differences aside.
The book tour is called the “Civility Tour” and Whittaker specifically wants to equip young people with strategies for effective interpersonal engagement.