TOLLAND, Mass – On a rickety wooden porch of the camp playhouse named for Paul Robeson, famed African-American singer and civil rights dissident, a cluster of 15- and 16-year-old girls sit cross-legged, hunched over poems and testimonials recounting the bombing of Hiroshima.
Canoes, campfires, Yiddish, and communist roots
At Camp Kinderland, labor solidarity and Yiddish history are celebrated, and no matter what cabin you bunk in, you are part of the 99 percent.
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