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Taye Diggs writes children’s book about racial injustice

By MARK KENNEDY, Associated Press
Published: February 6, 2022, 6:02am
3 Photos
FILE - Actor and author Taye Diggs poses for a portrait during the 2018 Television Critics Association Summer Press Tour, on Aug. 6, 2018, in Beverly Hills, Calif. Diggs is the author of "Why" a children's book illustrated by Shane W. Evans.
FILE - Actor and author Taye Diggs poses for a portrait during the 2018 Television Critics Association Summer Press Tour, on Aug. 6, 2018, in Beverly Hills, Calif. Diggs is the author of "Why" a children's book illustrated by Shane W. Evans. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP, File) (Feiwel & Friends) Photo Gallery

NEW YORK — In a powerful new book for children, a little girl looks at a crowd of street protesters and asks: Why are those people marching? A few pages later, a child asks her family: Why are buildings burning?

“Why?: A Conversation About Race” by actor Taye Diggs with illustrations by Shane W. Evans, out now, is an unvarnished look at social activism from the eyes of Black children as they struggle to understand demands for change.

“I needed to be honest,” Diggs says in an interview with his illustrator. “And sometimes being honest and real can be uncomfortable. And I think that that’s OK.”

The book portrays a series of questions from kids posed to adults. One is: Why are people crying near a makeshift memorial? “Our people are crying because we are in pain,” comes the answer. Another asks why are protesters shouting. An adult explains: “Our people are shouting because we need to be heard.”

Evans’ expressive drawings show each child’s face change from worry to understanding as they digest what they hear from loved ones. His protesters hold banners and signs but they are blank — a nod to the sad timelessness of the fight for racial justice.

“I think the beauty of the words and the pictures together is that there’s a way to kind of speak above the fray,” says Evans, who was inspired in his drawings by deep talks with his daughter in their car.

While the book ends on a hopeful note, Diggs and Evans do not shy away from discussing that some protests have ended with burning buildings. “Sometimes buildings must burn,” an adult says. “The buildings burn for us. The anger burning those buildings is us.”

Diggs says he wanted to be honest and not instantly declare what was right and what was wrong. He wanted to look at the roots of the issue and start a conversation, something that didn’t happen when he was young.

“If someone had taken the time to sit with me and say, ‘Well, let’s see. Why do you think these people are doing this?’ then that opens up a different conversation,” he says.

“With this book, I wanted to kind of give folks an opportunity to just sit in what was happening and look at it before passing judgment.”

“Why?” is Diggs and Evans’ fifth children’s book together, a collaboration that started with “Chocolate Me,” which spotlighted what it feels like to look different and get teased at school.

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