Eating Dr. King's Dinner: A Memoir of the Movement, 1963-1966

Chuck Fager
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Eating Dr. King's Dinner: A Memoir of the Movement, 1963-1966

Chuck Fager
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160 PAGESANGLAIS

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  • Date de publication : Jan 10, 2014
  • Langue : anglais
  • Nombre de pages : 160
  • Éditeur : Kimo Press
  • ISBN : 9780945177241
  • Dimensions : 5.98" W x 0.37" L x 9.02" H
Chuck Fager is a writer, editor, publisher and peace activist. He was born in Kansas to a Catholic family, and raised on military bases. In high school, Fager left Catholicism, and for some years regarded himself as an atheist. However, he remained interested in religion, and was influenced by the work of C.G. Jung, who took religion seriously, if in an un-orthodox way. Fager enrolled at Colorado State University in 1960. There he was in the Air Force Reserve Officers' Training Corps at Colorado State University, where he won medals and commanded a prize-winning AFROTC drill team. However, by his senior year his interest in the Air Force had waned, and he left the ROTC. After leaving Colorado for the South in late 1964, he completed a B. A. in Humanities from Colorado State University in 1967. While working in the civil rights movement, he encountered and later joined the Religious Society of Friends, or Quakers. He performed alternative service as a conscientious objector to the military draft, and then attended Harvard Divinity School, mostly part-time, for four years, starting in 1968. In 1970, he resolved to pursue writing as a full-time vocation, which he has never given up, publishing numerous books and a stream of articles while taking a variety of jobs to support these projects. Not long after the 9/11 attacks he became Director of Quaker House, a peace project near Fort Bragg in North Carolina that was very active through the Iraq & Afghanistan wars. He retired from Quaker House in 2012, and has since been busy with various writing projects. Chuck has been married and divorced twice, has four children, and a growing number of grandchildren. He lives in Durham, North Carolina.

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