During this Thanksgiving week, I am thankful for many things and for many people—such Marian
Wright Edelman, a passionate advocate for children over the last 40 years.
Marian Wright
was born in South Carolina in 1939. Her father, a Baptist minister, died when
she was 14. His last words were, “Don’t let anything get in the way of your
education.” She didn’t.
Marian went on
to earn a law degree at Yale and then in 1964 became the first African-American
woman admitted to the Mississippi Bar. That year she was very active in civil
rights activities in Mississippi, leading in what came to be known as Freedom
Summer.
The Edelmans
have three grown sons, including Jonah (b. 1970), their second son, who has a
Ph.D. from Oxford and is the co-founder and CEO of Stand for Children, an
education reform organization.
Ms. Edelman started the Children’s Defense
Fund in 1973, and it has become the nation’s strongest voice for children and
families. Here is CDF’s mission statement:
The Children’s Defense Fund Leave No Child Behind mission is to ensure every child a Healthy Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start, a Safe Start and a Moral Start in life and successful passage to adulthood with the help of caring families and communities.
Hillary Rodham
was one of the first staff lawyers for CDF, and then after she married Bill
Clinton in 1975 she was the Chair of its Board of Directors from 1986-92.
Ms. Edelman was
one of the featured speakers at the 2008 New Baptist Covenant gathering in
Atlanta. I heard that talk and was much impressed by her—and have been on CDF’s
mailing list ever since.
I also enjoyed
reading some of her latest book, The Sea
Is So Wide and My Boat Is So Small: Charting a Course for the Next Generation
(2008).
One of CDF’s
ongoing activities has been sponsoring summertime Freedom Schools across the
country. Since 1995, more than 100,000
K-12 children have had a CDF Freedom Schools experience. (Here is the link to
CDF’s website.)
The church June and I are members of has sponsored a Freedom
School for six weeks each summer for several years now. It is a considerable expense
and takes a lot of work, but it is a wonderful ministry to the children in the
church’s neighborhood, the majority of whom are Hispanic and African-American.
This year for the first time I read a story to the nearly
100 children enrolled in our Freedom School, and I was impressed by the
children’s attention and to the way the leaders were teaching/leading them.
The first Freedom Schools were held in Mississippi as part
of the 1964 Freedom Summer civil rights activities
mentioned above. So this was the 50th
anniversary year—as you can see from the picture I took the morning I was at
our church’s school in July.
This year a scholarly book honoring Ms.
Edelman and the Children’s Defense Fund was published under the title
“Improving the Odds for America’s Children.” On the back cover are these words
by Hillary Clinton:
In the past forty years, the Children’s Defense Fund has tirelessly worked to improve the lives of children in America. There are dozens of laws on the books protecting children and supporting families that simply wouldn’t be there if it weren’t for the Children’s Defense Fund.
Please join me in giving thanks for Marian Wright Edelman
and her indefatigable advocacy for the nation’s children.