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Honoring a new generation of leadership

3/16/2018, 12:48 p.m.
All too often, our “history” month turns into a tribute to the past. And while the past is an important …
Julianne Malveaux

Julianne Malveaux

All too often, our “history” month turns into a tribute to the past. And while the past is an important place to lift up, it is, indeed, a tributary, a stream that flows into the larger stream of an unbounded future. The future must always be greater than the present, or there has been no progress. And, in the words of Frederick Douglass, “progress concedes nothing without a demand.”

I spend much of Women’s History Month thinking of those who have come before me, whose shoulders on which I stand.

I claim Women’s History Month for black women and love to call our roll of luminaries that, for me, includes Dr. Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander, the first black woman to get a Ph.D. in economics; Dr. Phyllis Ann Wallace, the first black woman to get a Ph.D. in economics from Yale University and the first to attain tenure at M.I.T.

And there are more, but I also want to speculate about the future role of luminaries and reflect on that fact that many black women have made it possible for us to bask in a new generation of leadership. The past has laid a foundation, but the future is far more important than the past.

Thus, Leah Daughtry, who managed the 2016 Democratic Convention; Minyon Moore, who had a key role in the Clinton campaign; and Yolanda Caraway, an amazing political operative who has worked for the Rev. Jesse Jackson, President Clinton and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, put a footprint in the sand for future leadership with their Power Rising conference in Atlanta last month. They gathered more than a thousand black women from around the country to develop a “Black Women’s Agenda,” deliberately mixing up the seasoned with the sassy, established leaders with those who are eager to make their mark.

Symone Sanders, the CNN commentator who made her mark supporting U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders for president and who does not back down from a fight around principle and issues, led a panel of young women who spoke of the challenges in their work. Amanda Brown Lierman, a new mom and the political director of the Democratic National Committee, was among those on another panel about life in politics. Others on that panel included LaDavia Drane, who led black outreach for Mrs. Clinton’s campaign and is now chief of staff for Democratic Congresswoman Yvette Clark of New York, and Boston City Councilor Ayanna Pressley, who is running for Congress.

These young women aren’t playing. They are calling out their elders, but also calling out the rules. They aren’t trying to toe a line. They are trying to make a difference.

One of the most promising young leaders is Tamika Mallory, one of the four co-leaders of the Women’s March. Ms. Mallory is a protégée of the Rev. Al Sharpton. Her parents were among the founders of the National Action Network and she served as its executive director for several years. Because of her amazing work, Ms. Mallory earned a Phoenix Award from the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation in 2017.  With appropriate humility, she accepted her award “for the people.”

The Akan (Ghanaian) word “Sankofa” translates as “go back and get it.” It is associated with the proverb “Se wo were fi na wosankofa a yenkyi,” which means “It is not wrong to go back for that which you have forgotten.” The Adinkra symbol for Sankofa is either that of a bird with its head turned backward carrying a precious egg in its mouth.

The precious egg is the history of our leadership, the women like Mary McLeod Bethune and Dorothy Height and Sadie Alexander and Phyllis Wallace. Even while looking backward, though, the Sankofa bird is moving forward — like Tamika Mallory, LaDavia Drane, Amanda Brown Lierman and so many others.

In the paraphrased words of the poet Mari Evans, “Look on them and be renewed.”

The writer is an economist and author.