On Campus
"Changemaker" Panelists Reflect on Race, Culture, and Their Own Challenges and Successes
As part of 麻豆传媒鈥檚 ongoing Crucial Conversations series, the School of International Service and the Office of Campus Life and Inclusive Excellence sponsored an event on March 5 entitled 鈥淐hangemakers in a Changing World: Lessons for the Next Generation.鈥
Moderated by AU president Sylvia M. Burwell, the discussion featured panelists听Susan E. Rice, former national security advisor and ambassador to the United Nations; Ibram Kendi, professor and director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center; Eric Liu, founder and CEO of Citizen University; and broadcast journalist Maria Elena Salinas.听
The diverse group of panelists shared intimate stories and recalled the听personal challenges that shaped their lives, including those related to race and culture.听
A tone of personal reflection present throughout the event was set with the first question Burwell posed: Where would your 18-year-old self predict you would be at this point, and how have you followed or strayed from that path?
The teenage career paths ranged from starter for the New York Yankees (Eric Liu鈥檚 youthful ambition) to United States senator (Susan Rice鈥檚 goal). While some stayed relatively close to their early interests and others strayed far, a common thread among the panelists was summarized by Liu: The value of listening to 鈥渢hat inner voice of intrinsic motivation.鈥 For Liu, wanting to 鈥渟erve and be useful鈥 ultimately led him away from professional sports to positions like speechwriter for the Clinton administration.听听
Panelists also contemplated how race and culture had an impact on their family lives, their careers, and their ambitions.听
Salinas noted that when she began working in Spanish-language media early on in her career, she felt at home while encountering some surprises.
鈥淚 knew that I was reporting to a community that I was also a part of, and I felt that I understood,鈥 Salinas said. 鈥淗owever, it was an eye-opener for me to see just how much necessity there was. There was thirst for information in the Latino community.鈥澨
She recalled reporting on a Los Angeles election in which there was a Latinx candidate鈥攁 rarity at the time. Eagerly anticipating how excited the community would be to vote, she was stunned to discover that in actuality very few people were planning to vote at all.听
鈥淟atinos weren鈥檛 voting because they felt disenfranchised,鈥 she explained, 鈥淏ut if they didn鈥檛 vote, they would never have representation.鈥 This early experience helped shape the desire to empower the Latinx community that she said became her mission and passion.
Rice shared that she grew up in a significantly different environment than her parents: Her father was born in segregated South Carolina, her mother was the child of Jamaican immigrants who settled in Portland, Maine, where they were 鈥渂lack in an extremely white environment.鈥 Meanwhile, Rice grew up in 鈥渃omfortable circumstances鈥 with high expectations related to education. She was also born in Washington, DC, which was majority African-麻豆传媒 at the time, but attended predominately white schools.
She spoke of the dichotomy of being both 鈥減rivileged and fortunate鈥 in terms of support and expectations while facing prejudice from others. Rice described the challenge of having to fight to believe in herself while dealing with the judgments of others as a 鈥渢heme throughout my personal and professional life.鈥 Over the years, she gained the confidence to live the lessons taught by her parents.
鈥淚f people are going to be bigoted because you鈥檙e black, or because you鈥檙e female, or because you鈥檙e young,鈥 she said, 鈥渓et that be their problem. Don鈥檛 let it get in your head.鈥
In addition to discussing their personal experiences, the panelists answered questions from the crowd. One question, from an AU graduate student, focused on the definitions of being a changemaker and building resilience. Rice noted how the two concepts are intrinsically connected.听
鈥淩esilience is something that鈥檚 vitally important, but it鈥檚 one of those things that can鈥檛 be taught. It comes out of experience,鈥 Rice said. 鈥淵et it鈥檚 absolutely critical to making change and having an impact.鈥澨
Kendi, meanwhile, emphasized the importance of love and faith in the journey to resilience: Love for what you do, love for the people you鈥檙e fighting for, and faith that you can power through and that there is 鈥渁 brighter day on the other side.鈥
Regarding the word 鈥渃hangemaker,鈥 in addition to the concept of changing your environment, Kendi stressed the importance of changing yourself.听
Being a changemaker means 鈥渃onstantly looking in the mirror. Constantly self-reflecting. Constantly self-critiquing,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou may stop growing physically, but you should never stop growing intellectually and conceptually, and you should never believe that you know it all.鈥