America's Best Leaders: Marian Wright Edelman, Children's Defense Fund

November 19, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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Marian Wright Edelman

Marian Wright Edelman

Marian Wright Edelman is one of the world's premier advocates for children through her nonprofit Children's Defense Fund. But Edelman has long been a pioneer. In 1965, she was the first black woman admitted to the Mississippi bar. Later, she coordinated the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s Poor People's Campaign. Edelman sat down with U.S. News's Amanda Ruggeri. Excerpts

I never thought I was breaking a glass ceiling. I just had to do what I had to do, and it never occurred to me not to. I've always hated being hemmed in or seeing anybody being hemmed in. Even when I was the smallest child, I couldn't bear being told I couldn't drink at a so-called white drinking fountain.

One defining experience was running out in the middle of the night with my father. There was a car wreck—a migrant family had collided with a truck. The truck driver was white, and the workers were not. The ambulance came, and turned around when they saw the truck driver was not hurt. That's one of those things you just don't ever forget.

It never occurred to me that I was not going to challenge segregation. My father always said that if you follow the need, you'll never lack for a useful purpose. And so I did. I hadn't planned on going to law school. I wanted to study 19th-century Russian literature. But I got mad one day when I went down to the NAACP and saw all these people who didn't have lawyers. The white lawyers wouldn't take cases. So I applied to law school—hated it, but I stayed because it was the right tool then.

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Tags:
NAACP,
leadership,
children,
civil rights

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that was great i like that!

tiana of CA 5:43PM February 16, 2012

You Have Done Everything I Want To Do When Im Older. You Gave Me Hope .

-Thank You

Aleeia Rowe of MI 11:10AM February 28, 2011

for parents of children in foster care,who are poor and intimidated by agency, court, police. the agency in many cases change the goal for permanency planning from reunification with family to adoption. the agency is more often than not dominated by europeans and the children for whom they have responsibility are non-european, which can sometimes lead to conflicts based on religious,cultural,and class differences. Parents need culture competent legal representation, and parent advocates to even out the tremendous uneven balance of power in the triangle of parent/child in care and the the psychiatric,legal,administrative establishment. your logo of the little child screaming in terror that the boat is so small and the ocean so huge, can also speak for the terror a mother feels when her child is removed from the home and termination of parental rights is recommended by the agency to the court when there is a trail of mismanagement, cover up and conspiracy against the parent who stands alone. Need your advice ASAP.

Hyacinth M. Graham of NY 8:24PM September 07, 2010

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