logo
Book excerpt: 'Disciples of White Jesus: The Radicalization of American Boyhood'

Book excerpt: 'Disciples of White Jesus: The Radicalization of American Boyhood'

Yahoo31-03-2025

Photo by Getty Images.
The following is an excerpt from the recently published 'Disciples of White Jesus.' In its description, Publisher's Weekly says, 'A shifting American culture is pushing white Christian boys toward radicalization, isolation, and violence, according to this persuasive treatise.' Consider buying the book at an independent Minnesota bookstore.
We cannot understand the problems of radicalization among young, white Christian boys in America, nor fully grapple with the challenges and troubles facing these boys, without understanding what's happening in American schools. And without consulting that most underpaid and too-often scapegoated American professional, the public school teacher.
A teacher I'll call Joe, 59, is just the kind of teacher that hard-core advocates of traditional masculinity might dream up as their ideal educator for young, white Christian boys and men — at least at first blush. Joe, who has been teaching for 36 years in total, and 33 years in the Minneapolis Public Schools, stands 6 foot, 5 inches tall. When it comes to physical education instruction, which he has led for 23 years at his current school building, Joe is no-nonsense and almost stern, cutting a strong, athletic and disciplined figure, a product of his Marine veteran father, who worked for decades in underground pipelines after leaving the military.
Joe spends his winter days at an upper elementary school in a relatively affluent neighborhood of Minneapolis, with a student body that's more than 85% white; only to drive across the Mississippi River after school to St. Paul's Central High School, where he works as an assistant basketball coach at a school that is 59% POC students, including 29% Black students, in a neighborhood where 18% of residents live in poverty.
It's a fitting dual existence for Joe, who describes his childhood as a life in two worlds. His dad was a member of the Red Cliff Native American tribe, and the family lived together on the reservation near Bayfield, Wisconsin, even though Joe's mother was white. He recalls that sometimes he was bullied on both ends, about his Indigenous ancestry by the white kids, and from the Native kids, called an 'apple,' suggesting that while he was 'red' on the outside, he was really 'white' on the inside. Joe thought maybe that was because his teacher mom encouraged her four boys to do well in school, something that wasn't always popular on the reservation, for myriad reasons.
Teaching PE and coaching basketball enable Joe to use parts of his skill set and personality that some advocates of gender absolutism might consider contradictory. He retains much of the 'tough-love,' 'old-school' military mentality that his dad instilled in him. And at the same time, Joe also saw the ways in which that hard-core masculine identity led his dad to a life of physical pain and even premature death. Joe saw the strengths and limitations of a masculinity that's only rooted in hardness and discipline. So he brings a bit of his mom's more nurturing side to his role as an educator and coach as well. After all, Joe says the best parts of his day are often the hours he spends in physical education with a smaller group of students with disabilities and cognitive delays. These students, who are often withdrawn or quiet or uncooperative in public settings, seem to innately trust Joe, something I saw firsthand when I served as a substitute teacher in his classroom. They know the rhythms and routines of the gymnasium; it was a place they clearly felt accepted, loved, and known — something achieved by an educator rooted in discipline and athleticism but also in emotional connection, patience, and kindness.
Given his popularity among many of his students and student athletes, and his continued commitment to athleticism even into his 59th year, you might think that Joe is supremely confident and undeterred in any school setting. But he knows that washboard abs or biceps would be no match for an AR-15 in a potential school shooting situation.
'That scares me more than anything as a teacher,' Joe told me, when we discussed the potential of a school shooter coming to our shared neighborhood. 'Even who I am, there is very little I can do to stop that situation. The best thing we can do is just barricade ourselves.'
Joe says he thinks about it often, imagining himself in the shoes of fellow teachers and educators who have faced active shooters in their buildings.
'They probably thought the same things I do,' he said. 'Your senses are so heightened as a teacher. You're making sure all your doors are shut. You're following the proper procedures for code red. What do you do? What do I do? What if I'm at prep? What if it's happening in another area of the building? Of all the things, that's the one that scares me the most.'
I'm struck at this moment by the seriousness and vulnerability and sadness that has come over Joe's face. This is a man who deeply loves being a teacher. By the nature of his work with disabled students — among whom boys are overrepresented — and his role as a boys' basketball coach, Joe does tend to spend a bit more time with boys as an educator and coach, though his office is also filled with cards from former students, divided equally between boys and girls. He's also the father of a 20-something son, whom he watched attend school in the same district where he teaches. He says the two of them will talk about those boys who seem to fall through the cracks, the ones for whom traditionally male-dominated outlets like sports or mathematics don't seem to fit, but who also don't find their place in outlets like music or drama. He and his son recently together discussed the fact that two of his classmates — despite their relatively privileged backgrounds — had recently died of drug overdoses. Joe talked also of watching the boys who used to run with joy and abandon around his gym classes, pelting each other with balls, turn into sullen, withdrawn, and angry teenagers. Sometimes seeing them makes him feel sad and powerless.
'When you, as a teacher, can pinpoint those students out, you try and let them figure out a way for themselves, and also serve as advocate for them and help them find a way,' Joe says. 'Sometimes they just need an ear to bend. Sometimes parents will ask me about younger kids and help them find a group, or a place to fit in.'
I realize, in talking with Joe, that it's not his height or his athleticism or his perceived traditional masculinity that makes Joe a favorite among his students, or that has enabled him to have such longevity as a PE teacher in a challenging time for public school teachers, especially in inner-city, urban school districts. For Joe, for his students: the key is trust and relationship. He has been able to carve out a unique sense of both in his role as teacher and coach in Minneapolis. But it doesn't escape me that even in this ideal school, Joe still faces the fear and anxiety of the violence of the wider world, the ominous threat of a school shooting.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hot-air balloon in Brazil catches fire and falls from the sky, killing 8 and injuring 13
Hot-air balloon in Brazil catches fire and falls from the sky, killing 8 and injuring 13

New York Post

time5 hours ago

  • New York Post

Hot-air balloon in Brazil catches fire and falls from the sky, killing 8 and injuring 13

A hot-air balloon caught fire and tumbled from the sky on Saturday in Brazil 's southern state of Santa Catarina, killing eight people, firefighters said. Footage shared by local news outlet G1 showed billows of smoke coming from the balloon in flames as it hurtled toward the ground in the municipality of Praia Grande. On a video on social media, two people can be seen falling through the air as the fire spread onboard the aircraft. Advertisement A hot-air balloon (not pictured) caught fire and fell down in Brazil, killing eight people. AFP via Getty Images Thirteen people survived and were taken to hospitals, Santa Catarina's military fire brigade said, adding that 21 people were on board including the pilot. 'We are in mourning. A tragedy has happened. We will see how it unfolds, what happened, why it happened. But the important thing now is for the state structure to do what it can,' Gov. Jorginho Mello said in a video on X. Advertisement Mello said he has asked authorities to head to the municipality 'to do as much as possible to rescue, to help, to take to hospital, to comfort the families.' Hot air balloons are pictured during the 35th Hot Air Balloon International Festival, in Torres, Brazil, on April 03, 2025. AFP via Getty Images 'According to the pilot, who is one of the survivors, a fire started inside the basket and then he began to lower the balloon. When the balloon was very close to the ground, he ordered people to jump out of the basket,' Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Praia Grande head police officer Tiago Luiz Lemos as saying. 'Some of them didn't manage to jump. The fire increased and the balloon ended up falling,' Lemos added. Advertisement G1 reported that the balloon's expected flight time was 45 minutes, with the balloon reaching 1000 meters, and cost 550 reais (around $100) per passenger. Praia Grande is a common destination for hot-air ballooning, a popular activity in some parts of Brazil's south during June festivities that celebrate Catholic saints such as St. John, whose feast day is on June 24. Last Sunday, a balloon came down in Sao Paulo state, killing a 27-year-old woman and injuring 11 other people, G1 reported.

Archaeologists discover ‘sensational' artifacts beneath 13th century medieval church
Archaeologists discover ‘sensational' artifacts beneath 13th century medieval church

New York Post

time9 hours ago

  • New York Post

Archaeologists discover ‘sensational' artifacts beneath 13th century medieval church

Archaeologists recently uncovered 'sensational' artifacts beneath a historic monastery in Poland — offering a glimpse into monastic life in the 18th century. The discovery was found near the Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary in Chełm, Poland, roughly 40 miles east of Lublin. The medieval church was founded in the 13th century. Throughout its long history, the church has been affiliated with the Eastern Orthodox Church as well as the Ruthenian Uniate Church. It is currently Roman Catholic. Historians excavated a 17th-century Basilian monastery next to the church. The monastery, which once housed Greek Catholic monks who followed the rule of St. Basil, was built around 400 years after the church was established. In a statement, officials from the Lublin Voivodeship Conservator of Monuments (LWKZ) said the recent discovery was 'like no other.' 'This year's research season has yielded a sensational discovery,' said the statement, which was translated from Polish to English. 4 Archeologists made a discovery beneath a historic monastery which was found near the Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary in Chełm, Poland. NurPhoto via Getty Images 'After dismantling the wooden floors on the upper level of the former Basilian monastery, hundreds of fragments of very rare heraldic tiles were found in the fill.' Officials wrote that the tiles were glazed 'in green and brown, and were made to order with specific symbolism, a bishop's coat of arms and titles.' 4 The artifacts discovered were heraldic tiles, glazed 'in green and brown, and were made to order with specific symbolism, a bishop's coat of arms and titles,' officials from the Lublin Voivodeship Conservator of Monuments said. Stanis¿aw Go¿ub via the Lublin Voivodeship Conservator of Monuments 4 'This year's research season has yielded a sensational discovery,' the officials said in a statement translated from Polish to English. NurPhoto via Getty Images 'Currently, work is ongoing to inventory, piece together and study these extraordinary artifacts,' the government agency noted. Historians estimate the tiles were crafted between 1711 and 1730. They were specifically designed to fit a stove, as indicated by their distinctive shape and size. Start your day with all you need to know Morning Report delivers the latest news, videos, photos and more. Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters 'One of the reconstructed tiles had a faceplate shaped similarly to a square, measuring 25.8 cm x 25 cm x 9.5 cm (height of the chamber), while another measured 24.5 cm (length of one side) x 7.8 cm (height of the chamber),' the translated post added. The tiles' faceplates also bore distinct initials, including those of Józef Lewicki. He served as the monastery's superior before becoming bishop of the Chełm Eparchy in 1711. 4 The tiles' faceplates have distinct initials. Stanis¿aw Go¿ub via the Lublin Voivodeship Conservator of Monuments This remarkable find adds to a series of intriguing archaeological discoveries in Poland this year. In March, a pair of pedestrians stumbled across an ancient deadly weapon on the coast of the Baltic Sea. In the Polish city of Krakow, excavators at Wawel Royal Castle recently found a remarkable ring that dates back over 500 years.

Joseph 'Joe' Julius LeDoux Sr.
Joseph 'Joe' Julius LeDoux Sr.

American Press

time11 hours ago

  • American Press

Joseph 'Joe' Julius LeDoux Sr.

Msg. Joseph Julius LeDoux Sr. (Retired), 84, passed away peacefully with his family by him. Born and raised in Pine Island, La., Joe was a hunter and fisherman helping to provide for his family, but hunting was his passion. Joe went on to enlist in the United States Army. He and some buddies, while stationed in New York, went out on a blind date one night and that is where he met a 'YANKEE' name Phyllis, who later became his wife for 65 years. They faced wonderful times and turbulent times, but their marriage vows were seared into the hearts of each of them. Joe and Phyllis raised three great children. He enjoyed sharing history with his family, he and his family traveled to locations of American History. Joe Spent 22 years in the military in some form or fashion with active service and reserves. On Sept. 11, when the country was attacked, Joe was in a room with others at the Pentagon where they left that room approximately 20 minutes before the plane flew into the Pentagon, into that very room. Joe is survived by his wonderful wife, Phyllis LeDoux; a daughter, Kim Marie Garland; two sons, Joseph Julius LeDoux II and Dale Anthony LeDoux; four sisters, Shirley Shaw, Jane Ruff, Juanita Ardoin, and Veronica LeBlanc; sister-in-law, Laura LeDoux; two grandchildren, Kyle LeDoux and Haley LeDoux; six great-grandchildren, Cooper, Tiffani, Brittany, Joanna, Camilla, and Michael; four great-great-grandchildren, Tyreek, Arriana, Brandon, and Brianna. Preceding him in death is his sister, Anna Faul; three brothers, Paul LeDoux, James LeDoux, and John LeDoux; grandson, Michael Garner, and his parents, Eugene and Hannah LeDoux. The family will welcome relatives and friends on Monday, June 23, 2025 at Hixson Funeral Home of Lake Charles beginning at 4 p.m. until 7:30 p.m. with a rosary to prayed at 5 p.m. Visitation will resume on Tuesday, June 24, 2025 at 11 a.m. until the procession leaves for the church at 2 p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at Our Lady Queen of Heaven at 2:30 p.m. Burial will follow at Pine Island Cemetery. Msgr. Daniel Torres will officiate at the services. The family would like to express a heartfelt thank you to Heart of Hospice and the family and friends who assisted with Joe's care. Please leave fond memories for the LeDoux family at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store