The Commercial Appeal

‘Take My Hand’ considers an injustice fueled by prejudice, good intentions

- Sara Beth West

Most people trust the legal system to stand for truth and justice, even knowing it is flawed and that it will, at times, fail. But what do you call it when the victims prevail, but justice remains out of reach? What happens when you complicate the narrative, when the concepts of guilt and innocence are blurred and dilated, expanding culpabilit­y to include those with good intentions and those who stood silent in witness to a crime.

Memphis native Dolen Perkins-valdez has spent some time with these questions, and the result is her third novel, “Take My Hand.” This diamond-bright historical novel opens in 2016, but the heart of the story takes place through the narrator recounting her experience as a nurse in Montgomery, Alabama, in 1973. “Take My Hand” gives voice to Dr. Civil Townsend, a Black physician at the end of her career who can’t be at peace until she shares the story of Erica and India, sisters who were unlikely patients of the family planning clinic where Civil worked as a nurse.

On her first visit to the girls’ home, Civil is tasked with giving them birth control injections, a common practice, especially for younger patients who might have trouble with a daily pill. She believes in the clinic’s mission and is determined to facilitate choice for women in her community. But at 11 and 13, Erica and India are terribly young, a fact that troubles Civil even before she sees the depth of their poverty and long before the white clinic director facilitate­s surgical sterilizat­ion for both girls. Outraged, Civil fights on their behalf, working with a talented young lawyer who ultimately takes their case all the way to federal court.

Inspired by true events in 1970s Alabama, the book shines a light on a painful part of U.S. history. Substantia­l research into the original case, Relf v. Weinberger, provides a solid foundation for the narrative, but when Perkins-valdez couldn’t find a firsthand account from any of the nurses who worked at the real clinic during that time, she created one in Civil Townsend. These nurses are the witnesses who never testified, and “Take My Hand” considers whether their silence makes them complicit.

Raised in upper-middle-class Centennial Hill, Civil is the daughter of a doctor and an artist. Her experience as a Black woman in the South could not be called easy, but she acknowledg­es the vast sea between her experience and that of Erica and India. Immediatel­y sympatheti­c to their plight, she wants to help, and with her relative wealth and connection­s, she can. But Perkins-valdez skillfully unsettles the easy definition­s of “help,” asking readers to question the notion of good intentions.

Townsend’s intentions are good, but they could still do harm; the same is true of the clinic director, who believes she is doing the right thing even as she steals the sisters’ future choices and their sense of control over their own bodies. The novel takes on issues of racial inequity and harmful bias, addressing class and gender and even abortion, but it always comes back to what has been stolen from these girls and so many others like them.

As she sits in the courtroom, listening to the alarming statistics regarding the practice of coerced or forced sterilizat­ion, Civil thinks, “How dare they? Our bodies belonged to us. Poor, disabled, it didn’t matter. These were our bodies, and we had the right to decide what to do with them. It was as if they were just taking our bodies from us, as if we didn’t even belong to ourselves.” It was a theft, a crime that has been replicated in countless ways over the years, and this novel serves as testimony.

Returning to Montgomery years later, Civil knows justice remains a slippery thing. She visits Lou Feldman, the lawyer on the case, and he agrees, noting, “Back then I thought justice was a moral right.” “And now?” Civil asks.

“I still believe in right and wrong or else I wouldn’t still be practicing law after all these years,” he replies. “It’s just that now I know justice is as complicate­d as everything else in life.”

“Take My Hand” walks bravely through those complicati­ons, walking the thin line between despair and hope. In the end, though, the voice we hear is that of Civil Townsend — a Black woman who has made unconventi­onal choices throughout her life, insisting on the viability and necessity of those choices. Where India and Erica had their choices stripped from them, Civil leans in and insists, her life a representa­tion of a true and complicate­d hope.

For more local book coverage, please visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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