To her negro church
Cal takes Jem and Scout to First Purchase African M.E. Church, where their father, Atticus, is defending Tom Robinson.
Seduce Cal
Jem and Scout attend First Purchase African Methodist Episcopal Church on this particular Sunday.
Jem and Scout personally experience racism in Maycomb through witnessing the bigotry and discrimination directed at their black housekeeper, Calpurnia, and also through the prejudice against their neighbor, Boo Radley, who is ostracized by the community. Jem and Scout come to understand the pervasive racism in their society through these experiences.
Calpurnia doesn't trust Jem and Scout to go to church by themselves (there was a past incident involving tying up one of their Sunday School classmates in the furnace room), and decides to take them with her to her church instead
She suggests that Cal should leave, and that Cal is a bad influence on Scout and Jem since she's black. She wants to send Cal away because she thinks Cal doesn't control the children well, and should never have brought them to her church.
Lulu is a lady from the church who informs Calpurnia that the kids, Jem and Scout, are at the courthouse. She tells Calpurnia in a harsh tone that the children should not have been brought to the trial.
Jem is in the sixth grade and Scout is in the first grade at the beginning of the novel "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.
Jem calls Scout, Scout... Scout is the nickname. Scout's real name is Jean Louise Finch
Jem decides to sneak out with Scout and Dill to find Atticus. Jem is Scout's brother in To Kill A Mockingbird.
Scout is entering 3rd grade while Jem is going into 7th grade. Jem and Scout are two of the characters in the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird.
Jem gets into a fist fight with Walter Cunningham because Scout criticizes his family. Jem defends the honor of the Cunninghams by standing up for Walter.
Jem walked scout to the pageant at her school