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Fourteen Leaders You Should Get to Know This Black History Month

Heroes don’t always wear capes. And the most amazing leaders don’t always receive the recognition and applause that they deserve.

This Black History Month we honor the leaders who paved the way for future generations while also recognizing contemporary advocates who are doing the same. Below is a list of several leaders in communities across the country who are making a difference one day at a time. 

California

Glenn Harris is the president of Race Forward and has over 25 years of experience working on racial and social justice issues with community groups, foundations and government agencies. Prior to joining Race Forward, Glenn served as President of the Center for Social Inclusion, which merged with Race Forward in 2017. He also supported the start of projects similar to the Race and Social Justice Initiative across the country and helped found the Government Alliance on Race and Equity (GARE).

Florida

Rev. Rhonda Thomas. Thomas is the executive director of Faith in Florida and a member of the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative. She who created a toolkit and asked churches to teach Black history after Gov. Ron DeSantis restricted the teaching of African American history. She recruited 500 churches from Florida and 20 other states to teach the curriculum. In addition to this latest project, Thomas has been a long time advocate on gun violence prevention. She lost a nephew to gun violence and was also present in the aftermath of the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida to offer pastoral care to young people and their families. Learn more here.

Georgia

Kendra Cotton. Kendra is the chief executive officer of New Georgia Project Action Fund and its affiliated organization, New Georgia Project. She is a member of the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative. She is a lifelong Southerner and has spent her professional career promoting civic engagement and advocating for underrepresented communities to become more involved in our democracy.

Phyllis Hill. Hill is the national organizing director for Faith in Action. She also founded and runs the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative, which is designed to support the leadership and ingenuity of Black women executive directors in the South. She believes that Black women are often sought out for their talents without recognition of their struggles. In founding the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative, Hill sought to create a safe, supportive space where Black women could be seen and known. The group includes the executive directors of the New Georgia Project, Memphis Artists for Change, the Power Coalition for Equity and Justice, One Voice, Faith in Florida and fellows in Alabama. Learn more here and here.

Maryland

Dr. Sabrina N’Daiye. Dr. Sabrina is an author, psychotherapist and trauma expert. She is the founder of the Heart Nest Center in Baltimore, MD. She works with communities that have experienced a natural disaster or mass shooting, helping them process their experience and move towards healing. N’Diaye also works with persons who are living with HIV/AIDS to help them process their diagnosis, live fruitful lives. She is most proud of her work inside prisons where she works with men and women to process the trauma of incarceration and find healing and hope.

Arion Long. After developing a uterine tumor, Arion went into septic shock and eventually lapsed into a coma. Pregnant at the time, her daughter was stillborn. Arion entered her first pitch competition for Femly two weeks after being released from the hospital. While physically and emotionally depleted, she was on a mission to ensure women and girls had access to safe feminine care products. Her sister attended some of Arion’s early pitch competitions to hold her hand and help her stand up. To date, Arion Long has raised more than $2.8 million for her company, Femly, from more than 50 pitch competitions. Femly offers organic period care via dispensers in public restrooms, schools and other establishments. She also patented dispensers that can see and recognize pigmented skin. Learn more here. 

James Wahls. Wahls is an impact investor with Mission Investor Exchange. He also founded and runs the Revolve Fund, a philanthropic initiative dedicated to catalyzing businesses led by people of color. Since many people of color have less disposal income, launching and sustaining a business can be a challenge. Revolve seeks to help businesses with capital but also the network access that would propel their long-term success. He founded the Revolve Fund in March 2022 as a pilot project. He received funding  in March 2022 with funding from institutions such as JPMorgan ChaseOpen Society Institute – Baltimore, PNC Bank, and the Rockefeller Foundation. With the Maryland Philanthropy Network as fiscal sponsor, the fund offers recoverable grants to businesses with a social purpose and nonprofits. The hope is that the funding and associated support can help businesses led by people of color get on firm footing before having to repay or return investments. To date, the fund has raised more than $1.9 million and deployed more than $560,000 in capital and technical assistance. Learn more here.

John Holdsclaw IV. Following George Floyd’s tragic murder in 2020, scores of organizations, corporations, financial institutions, and retailers pledged to give their time, money, and resources to close the racial wealth gap. However, the further we move from that summer of racial reckoning, we see less commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion. Companies have cut their DEI programs, and many people have stopped talking about investing in Black businesses and communities. But Holdsclaw is working hard at community uplift through the entity he founded, Rochdale Capital, an emerging community development financial institution (CDFI). Rochdale works with key stakeholders – such as the Revolve Fund – to increase opportunities for co-op and community ownership in under resourced communities. Rochdale funded Iowa’s first Black-owned grocery store, All In, with a $400,000 loan. Learn more here.

Danielle Torain. Torain is an attorney and leader in the philanthropic space. She previously led the Open Society Foundations’ Baltimore office, OSI-Baltimore. Prior to that, she worked to get resources into the hands of Black and people of color-led organizations in Baltimore with stints at the Baltimore Children and Youth Fund, The Annie E. Casey Foundation and Frontline Solutions. Upon learning that OSI-Baltimore would wind down its funds, Torain raised $20 million in combined contributions to ensure the grantees she long supported at OSI-Baltimore would not be left in a compromised position. She single-handedly ensured that these organizations – which often struggle to find support – had a longer runway to identify other philanthropic partners. Learn more here.

 

Mississippi

Nsombi Lambright-Haynes is an experienced executive director with a demonstrated history of working in the non-profit organization management industry. She is the executive director of One Voice, and a member of the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative. She’s done significant work to expand access to the ballot, and promote civic engagement. 

Ellen Reddy is the executive director of the Nollie Jenkins Family Center in Lexington, Mississippi. She is on a mission to educate parents, policymakers and community members on the dangers of corporal punishment. She has noted, “We need a different vision for our children and schools. That vision must include safe spaces for young people.” Reddy has passionately outlined the fear that children experience when they are beaten at schools or at home. She has advocated other models for positive parenting and has broadened the debate around discipline. Learn more here.

New York

Sally Vonner. Sally Vonner is the General Secretary and CEO of United Women in Faith. United Women in Faith is the largest denominational organization for women. In her capacity as General Secretary, Vonner supports programs that center the needs of women, children and youth. Her organization is active in the fight to end the school to prison pipeline. They also work to advance climate justice and ensure a just transition to renewable energy. 

Dr. Omolara Uwemedimo. Dr. Omolara is a pediatrician and co-founder of Strong Children Wellness. She is founder of Melanin and Medicine where she coaches physicians on how to do their work more sustainably. After being hospitalized and diagnosed with an autoimmune disease, she realized that she needed to approach medicine differently. She co-founded Strong Children Wellness to bring practitioners to patients. Rather than asking families to go from appointment to appointment to have their and their child’s needs met, Strong Children’s Wellness brings practitioners to the community. In their model, children can see a pediatrician, a therapist or psychiatrist if they need one and families can receive social services, all in one building. This cuts down on time, travel costs, requests for paid time off. It centers the patient and ensures better service for children and families. Learn more here.

Oregon

Eric K. Ward. Eric is a Senior Vice President at Race Forward. He is a nationally-recognized expert on the relationship between authoritarian movements, hate violence and preserving an inclusive democracy. He has over three decades of leadership experience in community organizing and philanthropy. He is an in-demand speaker, media source and commentator.  

This National Voter Registration Day, the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative to Focus on State-Level Voter Purges

For Immediate Release

Sept. 18, 2023

ATLANTA – The Black Southern Women’s Collaborative (BSWC) will celebrate National Voter Registration Day, on September 19, by engaging Black communities around the threat of voter purges, and by registering Black communities to vote. The network of Black women organizers in the South is also highlighting the ways in which their group is pushing back. The BSWC includes Kendra Cotton, executive director of the New Georgia Project; Rev. Rhonda Thomas, executive director of Faith in Florida; Nsombi Lambright, executive director of One Voice; Ashley K. Shelton, president and founder of the Power Coalition for Equity & Justice; Tameka Greer, executive director of Memphis Artists for Change; and Phyllis Hill, BSWC founder and national organizing director for Faith in Action. They released the following statement:

“Studies show that 60% of eligible voters are never asked to register,” said Rev. Rhonda Thomas, BSWC member and executive director of Faith in Florida. “Given the many people who have been removed from the voting rolls, we want to spend National Voter Registration Day engaging as many people as possible and ensuring they register to vote or confirm that their registration is up to date.”

Faith in Florida will celebrate Nation Voter Registration Day in Eatonville, Florida. Eatonville is the oldest black town in the United States. Incorporated on August 15, 1887, by 27 black men, it was one of the first self-governing all black municipalities in the United States.  

Faith in Florida’s goal is to register 200 voters and encourage 100 people to encourage at least 100 people to complete the vote by mail applications. “We hope to expand the electorate in 41 counties,” Thomas said.

“This is a moment to dialogue with voters about their registration, their plans for voting, and the reasons our votes matter,” said Tameka Greer, BSWC member and executive director of Memphis Artists for Change. “We are also engaging voters who are at risk of being purged from the voting rolls and encouraging them to check their registration status.”

“One vote may seem insignificant, but every vote is an opportunity to help create the future we envision,” said Nsombi Lambright, BSWC member and executive director of One Voice. “It is part of a larger strategy, but it is a component that cannot be overlooked or ignored. “We will use this as an opportunity to not only sign up new voters but to reclaim voters pushed out of the system through purging.”

To date, One Voice has collected lists of inactive voters from six circuit clerks offices and are actively pursuing the remaining 76 counties in Mississippi.

“The ballot booth is another opportunity to ensure our demands are met and that the evil of systemic racism is confronted and dismantled,” said BSWC member and founder and president of the Power Coalition for Equity & Justice Ashley K. Shelton. “Every election matters, which is why it’s crucial that we avail ourselves of moments like National Voter Registration Day to engage with voters and prepare them to turn out on election day.”

“We have an awesome opportunity to continue the work of those who came before us, and to simultaneously organize to make life better for those who will come after us,” said Kendra Cotton, BSWC member and executive director of the New Georgia Project.

The New Georgia Project has registered 41,000 people to vote since January 2023, and intends to register an additional 300 people on National Voter Registration Day.

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Affirmative Action Decision Scapegoats Black and Brown Students

For Immediate Release

June 29, 2023

ATLANTA – Today, Kendra Cotton, executive director of the New Georgia Project and member of the Black Southern Women’s Collaborative, issued the following statement on the Supreme Court decisions in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, and Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina:

“With its rulings in Students for Fair Admissions v. University of North Carolina and Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard College, the U.S. Supreme Court just reified the racist structures that our country was built on and that still permeate nearly every facet of our society. While Black Americans and other Americans of color have made huge strides, especially in education and college admissions, no one can deny the fact that affirmative action has been a critical safeguard in ensuring Black and brown students, who already face so many systemic barriers, do not continue to get left behind. So-called colorblind practices exist solely to ease the guilt of the more privileged and pay lip service to the fantasy of a post-racial society that, unfortunately, too many people in this country wrongly believe is reality. 

“Instead of scapegoating Black and brown students by digesting the sour grapes propagated by a few more privileged students who did not get into the schools of their choice, the Court should have demurred and made a strong statement encouraging these elite institutions to dispense with legacy admissions and special preferences for the children of the monied class, because THAT is the real source of inequality where college admissions is concerned. 

“As a former academic and the mother of a recent college grad, an entering college freshman, and a soon-to-be college applicant, I’d much prefer to live in a world where I felt reassured that my Black children could rely solely on their stellar academics and extracurriculars to gain admission into our country’s best universities. Unfortunately, that’s not the world in which we live. My kids and so many others like them already must work twice as hard in school to overcome the systemic barriers placed before them, and now true equity in our higher education system is even farther out of reach.”

 

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