San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BLACK LEADERS URGE YOUNG LEADERSHIP

Black History Month Breakfast speakers encourage fighting to keep civil rights intact

- BY BLAKE NELSON blake.nelson@sduniontri­bune.com

State and local leaders gathered this weekend to celebrate women of color, amid significan­t advancemen­ts and setbacks for Black communitie­s around the country.

Hundreds attended the fifth annual Black History Month Breakfast, hosted by Women of Color Roar Media, and speakers called on California to follow through on reparation­s and exhorted young people to become transforma­tive leaders.

Organizers also announced a new initiative to help the next generation attend college and run for office.

“This nation teeters on the brink of returning back to its old ways,” said California Secretary of State Shirley Weber, and she urged the crowd not to let hardearned civil rights slip away.

Weber singled out Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, whose administra­tion recently blocked a new Advanced Placement high school course on African American studies. That move was an attempt “to restore back a sense of ownership of White males,” she said. “We will not go back.”

Saturday’s event took place at the Jacobs Center for Neighborho­od

Innovation in San Diego. The morning honored a range of organizati­ons and elected leaders, many of whom were the first Black women to hold their positions, and happened to take place the same day as rallies around the region continue to honor Tyre Nichols, the 29-year-old Black man fatally beaten last month by Memphis

police.

Many speeches addressed the challenges facing non-white residents, especially women.

Karen Bass, the new mayor of Los Angeles, spoke on Zoom.

The main problem facing California was “income inequality,” she said. “Homelessne­ss is a manifestat­ion of that.” Bass pledged to work closely with mayors around the state, including Todd Gloria in San Diego, to reduce the number of people sleeping on the street.

“I am looking forward to learning from you and all that you have done,” Bass told Gloria.

Many attendees came from area high schools.

Angela de Joseph, the founder of Women of Color Roar Media, said her group was launching a new leadership academy to connect students with internship­s and scholarshi­ps. It would also lead workshops on topics like financial literacy and how to find a job, she said.

California’s chief fiscal officer, Controller Malia Cohen, told young people “to stay focused, have your faith and to be fierce.”

D’ajanae Lewis, a senior at San Diego High School, later said she was struck by the passion shown on stage.

“There are not a lot of moments where people are really confident in what they do,” she said in an interview. “Being fierce just makes everything better.”

Lewis, who is captain of her basketball team, said she hopes to become a nurse.

Several people wore dresses featuring portraits of major female leaders, painted by the artist T.L. Duryea, and the Buki Domingos’ Trio brought the room to its feet with a soaring rendition of the song, “A Change Is Gonna Come.”

“A Black woman’s agenda” is “everybody’s agenda,” said Geneviéve Jones-wright, a former public defender who now leads the local nonprofit Community Advocates for Just and Moral Governance.

She noted that San Diego has never had a Black mayor. “I hope to God I’m sitting in the room with the next one,” she said.

 ?? KRISTIAN CARREON PHOTOS FOR THE U-T ?? Longtime activist Kathleen Harmon (left) leads a prayer with Angela de Joseph, founder of Women of Color Roar Media, at her side during the fifth anniversar­y of the Women of Color Roar Breakfast at Jacobs Center for Neighborho­od Innovation on Saturday. The theme, “Sheroes Lead,” celebrated Black women leaders.
KRISTIAN CARREON PHOTOS FOR THE U-T Longtime activist Kathleen Harmon (left) leads a prayer with Angela de Joseph, founder of Women of Color Roar Media, at her side during the fifth anniversar­y of the Women of Color Roar Breakfast at Jacobs Center for Neighborho­od Innovation on Saturday. The theme, “Sheroes Lead,” celebrated Black women leaders.
 ?? ?? Keynote speaker California Secretary of State Shirley Weber spoke of recent moves in the U.S. endangerin­g civil rights advances: “We will not go back.”
Keynote speaker California Secretary of State Shirley Weber spoke of recent moves in the U.S. endangerin­g civil rights advances: “We will not go back.”

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