The Capital

Honoring women who make a difference in our lives

- Carl Snowden Carl Snowden is convener of the Caucus of African American Leaders. Contact him at carl_ snowden@hotmail.com.

The Michelle Obama Awards ceremony is held annually to honor women during Women’s History Month. The award is named after one of the most popular women in the world.

On Monday, the 6th Annual Michelle Obama Awards will occur at the Maryland Hall for the Creative Arts, 801 Chase Street in Annapolis. Doors open at 5:30 p.m.

Each year, the Caucus of African American Leaders (CAAL) partners with County Executive Steuart Pittman and the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Committee to host this event. There is no admission charge. The event is open to the public and all are welcome.

Pittman and the CAAL appointed a subcommitt­ee that includes Dee Goodwyn, Colleen Joseph, Vincent Moulden and Tiyana Parker to organize this gala.

A catered meal will be served and an opportunit­y will be afforded to network with the honorees, their families and friends.

The Michelle Obama Awards allow us to showcase women making a difference in our country.

This year’s honorees include Janet Owens, the first woman elected as county executive, Ellen Moyer, the first woman elected mayor of Annapolis, and Judge Ginina A. Jackson-Stevenson, who was appointed to the Anne Arundel County Circuit Court by Gov. Wes Moore.

Other recipients are Faye Allen Belt, Karen Theimer Brown, Dr. Maidha Gillins, Mikel Hicks, Tatiana J. Klien, Enid Collinson Lee, Kellie Michele McCantis-Price, Leah Aiello Paley, Lisa Shore and

Toni Strong Pratt.

Anne Arundel County has so many women who have broken glass ceilings and epitomize the attributes of Michelle Obama. They are icebreaker­s, pathfinder­s and trailblaze­rs.

I often reflect on my late mother, Ora Snowden, who died at 104 and was born before women had the right to vote.

In her lifetime she witnessed a Black woman become vice president of the United States, women appointed to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court and more than 125 women in the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

In Anne Arundel County, we have women who continue to break glass ceilings, they include St. John’s College President Nora Demleitner, Anne Arundel County Police Chief Amal Awad and U.S. Naval Academy Superinten­dent Vice Adm. Yvette Davids, now in charge of their respective organizati­ons.

We have an all-female delegation to the Maryland General Assembly representi­ng District 30, Sen. Sarah Elfreth, Del. Shaneka Henson, and Del. Dana Jones.

The majority of female Anne Arundel County council members are women and four of the nine-member Annapolis City Council members are women.

However, at the same time, we have witnessed women being elected and appointed in unpreceden­ted numbers to previously male-dominated profession­s, and we are also witnessing women losing ground.

In 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court curtailed women’s reproducti­ve rights. Women who lost that right are not allowed to determine whether they and their doctors will make decisions on whether to have children.

Women are not paid as much as men, even when working fulltime and year-round. This reality exists even after the Equal Rights Amendment was ratified by 38 states.

On March 25, we are celebratin­g the progress that women have made, while at the same time recognizin­g the struggle for women’s equality is far from over.

I end this column with an observatio­n. Can you imagine a world in which women did not exist? Whether it is Aretha Franklin singing “You Make Me Feel Like A Natural Woman” or Maya Angelou performing “Phenomena Woman.”

It was Michelle Obama, who in 2016, told us, “When they go low, we go high.” On March 25, we will once again witness the power of women making a difference in our lives.

During Women’s History Month, I want to thank my mother, who every day she was alive told me there is a power in the universe that puts wetness in water, blue in the sky and allows birds to fly.

She reminded me that when we treat women right, honor our elders, raise our children and serve our communitie­s, we are guaranteed that among the living there will be a woman who will hug us and smile and simply say, “When they go low, we go high.”

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