If you're in a coalition and you're comfortable, you know it's not a broad enough coalition.
Life's challenges are not supposed to paralyze you, they're supposed to help you discover who you are.
If, in moving through your life, you find yourself lost, go back to the last place where you knew who you were, and what you were doing, and start from there.
If every moment is sacred and if you are amazed and in awe most of the time when you find yourself breathing and not crazy, then you are in a state of constant thankfulness, worship and humility.
There is nowhere you can go and only be with people who are like you. Give it up.
Today whenever women gather together it is not necessarily nurturing. It is coalition building. And if you feel the strain, you may be doing some good work.
If we dwell in a community that is comfortable, then it's probably not broad enough a coalition.
Mothering/nurturing is a vital force and process establishing relationships throughout the universe.
The voice I have now, I got the first time I sang in a movement meeting, after I got out of jail... and I'd never heard it before in my life.
The Civil Rights Movement also reaffirmed me as a singer. It taught me that singing was not entertainment, it was something else.
I learned that if you bring black people together, you bring them together with a song. To this day, I don't understand how people think they can bring anybody together without a song.
I think the Civil Rights Movement changed that trajectory for me. The first thing I did was leave school. I was suspended for my participation in Movement demonstrations in my hometown, December, 1961
It makes sense that whatever the topic is, it's more compelling if you can provide the audience with a range of perspectives, and you can cross disciplines. And you don't have to control what people take out of it.
Coming up in the African-American culture, we were taught that we belonged to the universe and society was wrong in the way it dealt with us. We had to learn to express and affirm values not from the winning position.
And I used to think that proof that I had religion was whether I knew how to sing all of the songs.
I was at the Smithsonian for twenty years, and I'm still at the Smithsonian as a curator emeritus, and I still plan to figure out what that means for me at this point in my life
So one of the things that happened with integration in the South is they found that the black teachers were much more educated than the white teachers.
But I'm a historian. I wasn't interested in just being a producer, I was interested in doing research and presenting that research to a general public
Well, the first time I ran into the term religion, people were asking whether you had any. You know, some people had religion and some people didn't have religion
When I started graduate school I was interested in the culture of the Civil Rights Movement.
I just don't think one person has that much to contribute to any subject
Personally I discovered that you could go through the academy as a young scholar, come out, and almost immediately have an impact on the academic environment.
I came out of the Civil Rights Movement, and I had a different kind of focus than most people who have just the academic background as their primary training experience
I went to a church where you could not sing out loud in the service until you had been saved
I started graduate school in 1971, I started working at the Smithsonian in the festival in 1972. I went full-time at the Smithsonian in 1974. And I got my doctorate in 1975.