NJ BULLETIN
Your Resource for Towns in Northern New Jersey
Your Resource for Towns in Northern New Jersey
REAL ESTATE

Noam Sandweiss-Back, "You Only Get What You're Organized to Take"

Date and Time
Date / Time
Wed, Apr 9, 2025
7:00 PM to 8:00 PM
Location
Location
Bnai Keshet
99 South Fullerton Avenue
Montclair, NJ, 07042
Cost
Cost
Free Event
Organizer
Organizer
Watchung Booksellers
Category
Category
Literature/Poetry
Noam Sandweiss-Back,

Watchung Booksellers welcomes Noam Sandweiss-Back and Rev. Liz Theoharis to discuss You Only Get What You're Organized to Take: Lessons from the Movement to End Poverty. This event will be held at Bnai Keshet, 99 S. Fullerton Ave.

One of the nation’s leading anti-poverty organizers and moral voices shares the largely untold story of the movement to end poverty, open to all, and led by the poor themselves

As one of the nation’s leading anti-poverty organizers and moral voices, Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis explores the largely untold history of poor people’s movements in the United States and traces her own journey through some of the most significant anti-poverty struggles of the past thirty years.

In this book, Theoharis introduces us to the people leading the movement to end poverty, including:

  • multiracial groups of homeless people rising up from the streets and seizing empty, federally-owned homes;
  • mothers on welfare shutting down entire city blocks and going toe-to-toe with some of the most powerful people in the country;
  • farmworkers busting modern-day slave rings and winning living wages from multinational fast-food companies; and
  • coal miners, veterans, unemployed workers, students, artists, and more joining together in unusual and creative alliances to fight, sing, and pray their way toward freedom.

Drawing from personal experience, history, religion, political strategy, and more, Theoharis argues that American poverty will not end because of the goodwill of the powerful or through the charitable actions of well-meaning people alone. It will happen through a mass movement to end poverty, open to all, and led by the poor.

Theoharis passionately reminds us that poor people are not condemned to be subjects of history, but have always been agents of transformative change, and can be once again. Indeed, to reorient our society around the needs of everyone and reinvigorate the promise of democracy, the poor can and must become the architects of a new America.