One Hundred Black Girls to the Yale

Changemakers Program Featuring Students from Newark, East Orange & Hillside, NJ as Part of Be the Changemakers Program Hosted by Seton Hall University.

Submitted by Rachel Noerdlinger

      ESSEX, NEW JERSEY — A hundred Black girls, students from Newark, East Orange and Hillside, New Jersey, traveled to Yale University as part of the Be the Changemakers program which was hosted again this year by Seton Hall University and is part of the expanded East Orange Summer Work Experience Program.

The trip to Yale, which was themed “You Belong in the Room,” was sponsored by the East Orange Mayor’s Office of Employment and Training, the Newark Office of Violence Prevention and Trauma Recovery and the Hillside Innovation Academy and took place on Friday, July 28th.

Black Girls Go To Yale was led by Yale School of Public Health Professor Ijeoma Opara through her Dreamer Girl Project, an NIH funded initiative designed to empower and support young Black girls in their pursuit of higher education and well-being; Dr. Jamila T. Davis, the Community Practitioner in Residence for Seton Hall’s Center for Community Research and Engagement and Angelo Pinto, Esq., Community Activist in Residence at the Yale School of Public Health and an adjunct professor at Seton Hall’s Public Administration program. Davis and Pinto lead Be the Changemakers.

At Yale, the students were welcomed and led by Yale student guides for a campus tour and took part in motivational and affirmation workshops with several successful Black women.

Dr. Kelly Williams, the Director of Educational Support Services and Parent Relations for the East Orange School District, gave each girl a set of her affirmation cards, “The ABCs of Social Emotional Learning for Black girls,” and challenged the young women to “go after your dreams and know that you belong in any room you choose to enter.”

Dr. Opara recounted for the young women her own journey as the child of Nigerian immigrants who lived in Jersey City, New Jersey – and how both her parents died from disease by the time she was 23 years old. “I brought you here today because I want you to know that you can do it,” she told the young women. “I did it. My mother died when I was 18 years old and my father all too soon after. It made me want to understand the dynamics and disparities of public health; understand why my parents passed so young; understand why Black people in America die younger and at greater rates than white people. And now, with these NIH grants and the Dreamer Girl projects we’re working on answers – and solutions. And you, the next generation of Black women’s success, are part of that solution.”

Also supporting the young women were Shauyn Walker, Clerk of the Court for Hillside, NJ, Dawn Haynes, President of Newark Board of Education School Board, Flo Johnson, former Vice President of the Newark Board of Education School Board, Linda Baraka, entrepreneur and the wife of Newark, New Jersey Mayor Ras Baraka, Quiana Brown, Lieutenant of Hillside NJ and Tamika McReynolds, President of Teen Magazine.

As part of the Summer Work Experience Program, the young women will be writing about their experience and their experiences in the program this summer for an upcoming edition of Teen Magazine.

“Today was important. This society generally doesn’t count Black girls except to count them out,” said Jamila T. Davis “But we’re counting, and we’re inviting these 101 girls – Linda Baraka brought her infant baby girl on this trip — into our Sister Girl Tribe of success. And this day, and the days of achievement that will now follow, is Black Girl magic at its finest.”

Last year, 50 Black girls went to Yale, this year 100 (plus one) made the trip. Looking ahead, Dr. Opara has set an ambitious goal: 1000 Black girls to Yale next year.

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Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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