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At 17, Curtis "Kojo" Morrow enlisted in the United States Army and
joined the 24th Infantry Regiment Combat Team, originally known as
the Buffalo Soldiers. Seven months later he found himself fighting
a bloody war in a place he had never heard of: Korea. During nine
months of fierce combat, Morrow developed not only a soldier's
mentality but a political consciousness as well. Hearing older men
discussing racial discrimination in both civilian and military
life, he began to question the role of his all-black unit in the
Korean action. Supposedly they were protecting freedom, justice,
and the American way of life, but what was that way of life for
blacks in the United States? Where was the freedom? Why were the
Buffalo Soldiers laying their lives on the line for a country in
which African-American citizens were sometimes denied even the
right to vote? Morrow's story of his service in the United States
Army is a revealing portrait of life in the army's last all-black
unit, a factual summary of that unit's actions in a bloody "police
action", and a personal memoir of a boy becoming a man in a time of
war.
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