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For
more than half a century, Dorothy Height's
leadership has advanced the liberation
struggle of black women. She has indeed
carried out the dream of her friend and
mentor, Mary McLeod Bethune, to leave no one
behind.
November 7, 1937, Mary McLeod Bethune, the
founder and president of the National
Council of Negro Women, noticed the
assistant director of the Harlem YWCA as she
escorted Eleanor Roosevelt into an NCNW
meeting. When Bethune approached Height
asking for help in advancing women's rights,
she eagerly accepted a volunteer position.
In doing so, she began her dual role with
the YWCA and the NCNW, integrating her
background as a social worker and educator
and her experiences as an international
youth and women's advocate with her
commitment to rising above the limitations
of race and sex. She began forging bonds
between women across race and class in her
travels and studies in Africa, Asia, Europe,
and Latin America and reaffirmed her
conviction that making international
connections to women would only strengthen
her movement work.
Height
quickly rose through the ranks of the YWCA,
working on programs and policies that pushed
them toward more progressive attitudes
concerning black women. The organization's
full commitment to integration owes much to
her work. Her career as a civil rights
advocate blossomed, and in 1947, she was
elected national president of the Delta
Sigma Theta Sorority. As with the YWCA and
the NCNW, she carried them to another level,
moving the sorority into a new era of
activism on the national and international
scenes. So naturally, her subsequent
appointment as the president of the National
Council of Negro Women in 1957 made perfect
sense. She worked closely with Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., Roy Wilkins, Whitney
Young, A. Phillip Randolph and others,
participating in almost every major civil
and human rights event in the 1960's. Height
worked simultaneously for all three
organizations, retiring from the YWCA in
1977 and from the NCNW in 1998.
Perhaps
her most important work was as president of
the NCNW, where she led a crusade for
justice for black women and worked to
strengthen the black family. She developed
several national and community-based
programs, placing
special
emphasis on drawing young people in, and
established the Bethune Museum and Archives
for Black Women, the first institution
devoted to black women's history.
"Black women," says Height,
"are the backbone of every
institution."
She
has received innumerable awards for her
tireless efforts, including the Citizens
Medal Award from President Ronald Reagan in
1989 and the Medal of Freedom from President
Bill Clinton in 1994. In continuing the
NCNW's mission "to advance
opportunities and the quality of life for
African-American women, their families, and
communities, " Dorothy Height has
provided a critical voice in articulating
the needs and aspirations of women of
African descent around the world.
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