By Tanisha Coleman
MIAMI, FL — The Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce will celebrate Black “Herstory” Month by hosting a conversation with some of the local icons who blazed the trail fighting to level the playing field. The virtual event, hosted on Zoom and Facebook Live, will take place on Thursday, February 18, 2021 at 4 PM. The event is presented in part by Baptist Health South Florida.
“The Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce is hosting this conversation with local icons in celebration of Black History Month,” said G. Eric Knowles, president, and CEO. “We want to shine the spotlight on women pioneers who can share their success story with the goal of motivating others to blaze their own trail and create history.”
The event will consist of an online webinar that will feature a moderator, a welcome message from the sponsoring organization, and a panel of noted guests.
Dr. Johnson is currently the chief medical officer of South Miami Hospital (part of Baptist Health South Florida). Originally from New Jersey, Dr. Johnson is a graduate of Harvard University and Howard University College of Medicine. She completed her residency at Jackson Memorial Hospital/University of Miami. A leading speaker, both locally and internationally, Dr. Johnson has given numerous lectures on the topic of women and heart disease. She also serves as clinical assistant professor at the Florida International University Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine.
The panel will consist of the following local icons:
Dr. Dorothy Jenkins Fields is the founder of The Black Archives, History & Research Foundation, Inc. A native Miamian of Bahamian ancestry, Dorothy Jenkins Fields, PhD, is a noted Public Historian, Certified Archivist, Pre-servationist and Journalist. Dr. Jenkins Fields dedicates her life to collecting, processing, and making available information about the black experience in Miami-Dade County from 1896 to the present, the Jim Crow era and beyond. The consummate professional, Dr. Jenkins Fields earned a master’s degree in Curriculum and Instruction at The University of Northern Colorado (Miami campus), a doctorate in Public History at The Union Institute, certification in Archives Administration at Emory University, post graduate studies at the National Archives and Smithsonian, and a Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship for Master Teachers at Princeton University.
Thelma V. Gibson, Gibson Health Initiative; MDCOC 2011 Citizen of the Year
Ruth Shack, a native of Brooklyn, New York, is credited as the sponsor of the 1977 Human Rights Ordinance in Miami-Dade County, Florida. Ms. Shack earned her Bachelor of Arts in Humanities from Barry University with a major in English and a minor in Journalism/Communications. She received a Master of Arts in Social Science with specialization in Urban Sociology from the University of Colorado. Ms. Shack was elected to the Metro-Dade County Commission in 1976, 1978 and 1982. After leaving the commission, she became the president and CEO of the Dade Community Foundation, one of the largest philanthropic organizations in Florida. She retired in 2009.
The Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce was founded in 1974 by a group of Black business leaders out of a need for a strong organization that could objectively advocate the needs of a growing Black business community. To date, the Chamber has been led by four presidents, David Fincher (1974-1984), Dorothy Baker (1984-2004), Bill Diggs (2005-2013) and G. Eric Knowles (2014-Present). Understanding that membership is the lifeblood of the Chamber, they have focused on meeting the needs of the membership by upholding its five pillars of service: access, development, procurement, advocacy, and foundation. For over forty years, the Chamber has driven the evolving landscape of the black business community in South Florida. Through numerous social unrest challenges and a notable decline of several black business infrastructures, the Chamber has been the constant that the people count on to thrive forward and turn the tide. A new energy is being witnessed now, with the emergence of young, talented, and vibrant entrepreneurs blazing new trails and creating new and sustainable businesses. Miami-Dade is the gateway to tomorrow and the Chamber is proud to be the key that is unlocking and creating opportunities.
Baptist Health South Florida is considered a world-class healthcare organization. With more than 1.5 million patient visits every year, Baptist Health South Florida is leading the charge of encouraging healthy living. The Baptist Health team consists of approximately 23,000 employees and more than 4,000 physicians in virtually all specialties — many with national and international reputations. Baptist Health South Florida is a faith-based, not-for-profit healthcare organization and clinical care network that operates eleven hospitals and offers an extensive range of medical, surgical, and technological services including cancer, neuroscience, heart and vascular, sports medicine and orthopedics.
For more information on the Miami-Dade Chamber of Commerce, call 305-751-8648. To register for the Black “Herstory” Month event, click on the following link: www.m-dcc.org/events.