UMB Celebrates Black History Month
Sherrilyn A. Ifill, JD, came 鈥渉ome鈥 to help the 91大神, Baltimore (UMB) celebrate Black History Month on Feb. 1. And she brought Thurgood Marshall and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with her to the celebration.
Ifill, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF), served as professor at the University for 20 years at the . Happy to see many colleagues, she wasted no time getting to the heart of the matter before more than 400 people in the auditorium.
Sherrilyn Ifill, JD, addresses the "Civil Rights Challenges of 2017" at UMB's Black History Month celebration.
鈥淲hat a time this is in our nation,鈥 said Ifill, one of the country鈥檚 most highly regarded civil rights thinkers. 鈥淲e are at a moment in which we are once again engaged truly in an existential struggle for the soul of our democracy. 鈥 In the coming months and years, we will decide who we are and what America stands for. We will decide whether we are a nation committed to justice and equality, we鈥檒l demonstrate whether the Rule of Law remains the guiding principle for our democracy, and every one of us will learn who WE truly are, what WE stand for.鈥
She said King faced a similar 鈥渆xistential moment鈥 in 1963, and stepped forward, writing his famous Letter from a Birmingham Jail to white faith leaders about their obligations to live the Gospel and join him in fighting for equality.
Ifill said in today鈥檚 era of political division, we need love, again quoting King.
鈥淒r. King said that we have it twisted. That we have been taught that love is the opposite of power. He said in fact power and love must go together. Power without love, he said, is reckless and abusive. And love without power is sentimental and anemic.
鈥淚 believe in this moment in our country we are bearing witness to loveless power. We're seeing the exercise of power without empathy. Without stability. Without engagement and respect. We鈥檙e seeing the brutality of power. And I believe this is only the beginning. But I also believe we鈥檙e seeing in our country love. Love of one鈥檚 fellow citizens, which can also be demonstrated with a show of power,鈥 expressed Ifill.
University President Jay A. Perman, MD, also spoke about love as he opened UMB鈥檚 annual MLK celebration. 鈥淭oday is a dedication to the prophetic words Dr. King spoke exactly 60 years ago. 鈥楧arkness cannot drive out darkness. Only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate. Only love can do that.鈥欌
And as is his custom since becoming UMB president in 2010, Perman, a pediatric gastroenterologist, made sure children shared the stage. The sixth-grade chorus from Green Street Academy, under the direction of Joseph Eldridge, sang two songs, drawing standing ovations for each. The fact that at least nine members of the choir are in the UMB CURE Scholars Program, which identifies promising middle school students in Baltimore and prepares them for health care and research careers, made the appearance that much sweeter.
Ifill, who after the lecture went to celebrate her grandson鈥檚 first birthday, also lauded the children, saying her work is 鈥渨ith your vision in mind.鈥
She gave an overview of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc. (LDF), which was founded by Thurgood Marshall in 1940. 鈥淗e鈥檚 in many ways responsible for the democracy we recognize today,鈥 said Ifill, pointing out the future Supreme Court justice鈥檚 efforts to break down barriers such as Brown vs. Board of Education in 1954 鈥渢hat ended, at least legally, apartheid in this country.鈥
Marshall, who in 1935 sued the 91大神 School of Law where Ifill herself later worked ending segregation there, also won rulings for white clients like Ida Phillips, who was denied a job at Martin Marietta in 1966 because she had preschool-age children. 鈥淚t was the first employment sex discrimination case,鈥 said Ifill.
The LDF leader spoke out against current inequality of services, saying the word 鈥減ublic鈥 had become synonymous with black. 鈥淧ublic housing, public education, public transportation 鈥 I believe that鈥檚 why the Red Line got canceled. We have to recognize how these words and these services and these investments that originally helped create the white middle class have now been demonized and marginalized in ways that keep African-Americans from reaching the middle class themselves.鈥
The youngest of 10 children, Ifill, who needed her oldest brother to secure her college loan, derided the student debt load that is keeping today鈥檚 graduates from pursuing their passions 鈥 artists, social workers, even lawyers. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 tell you how many young people have come up to me and wanted to be civil rights lawyers but finished law school owing $150,000 and opted instead for work at a large firm. That鈥檚 my pipeline 鈥 the next Thurgood Marshall that we鈥檙e choking off,鈥 she said.
Ifill, who calls her civil rights work 鈥渄emocracy maintenance,鈥 didn鈥檛 avoid the political elephant in the room. 鈥淲e鈥檙e offering reckless support for candidates who are neither intellectually, emotionally, or morally equipped to lead,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e believing fairy stories that there are quick fixes to joblessness and dislocation. That millionaires can fix our education system.
鈥淏ut at this time when our country is being tested It鈥檚 incumbent upon you to find your role, and to find a way that you can contribute to democracy maintenance. Despite all the signs around us, I remain confident. So long as we keep our eyes on the prize we will not only weather this moment but our democracy just may come out stronger for being tested so powerfully.鈥
After Ifill鈥檚 presentation, UMB presented its annual Diversity Recognition Awards and heard from the choir. (View .) The awards went to student Faiza Hasan, staff member Courtney Jones Carney, MBA, and faculty member C. Daniel Mullins, PhD. Read more about them .