1 00:00:00,648 --> 00:00:04,374 T. Morgan Dixon: I would like to tell you about the most powerful woman 2 00:00:04,398 --> 00:00:05,728 you've never heard of. 3 00:00:07,017 --> 00:00:09,102 This is Septima Clark. 4 00:00:09,126 --> 00:00:10,910 Remember her name: Septima Clark. 5 00:00:10,934 --> 00:00:14,671 Dr. King called her the "the architect of the civil rights movement," 6 00:00:14,695 --> 00:00:17,362 because she created something called Citizenship Schools. 7 00:00:17,386 --> 00:00:20,602 And in those schools, she taught ordinary women the practical skills 8 00:00:20,626 --> 00:00:23,810 to go back into their communities and teach people to read. 9 00:00:23,834 --> 00:00:25,882 Because if they could read, 10 00:00:25,906 --> 00:00:27,056 they could vote. 11 00:00:27,383 --> 00:00:29,698 Well, these women took those organizing skills, 12 00:00:29,722 --> 00:00:32,795 and they became some of the most legendary civil rights activists 13 00:00:32,819 --> 00:00:34,294 this country has ever seen. 14 00:00:34,833 --> 00:00:36,479 Women like Diane Nash. 15 00:00:37,092 --> 00:00:38,267 You may know her. 16 00:00:38,291 --> 00:00:41,523 She orchestrated the entire walk from Selma to Montgomery. 17 00:00:41,547 --> 00:00:45,247 She was a cofounder of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, 18 00:00:45,271 --> 00:00:47,007 and they integrated lunch counters, 19 00:00:47,031 --> 00:00:48,850 and they created the Freedom Rides. 20 00:00:48,874 --> 00:00:50,637 Or you may remember Fannie Lou Hamer, 21 00:00:50,661 --> 00:00:54,097 who sat on the floor of the Democratic National Convention 22 00:00:54,121 --> 00:00:56,410 and talked about being beaten in jail cells 23 00:00:56,434 --> 00:00:59,262 as she registered people to vote in Mississippi. 24 00:00:59,286 --> 00:01:01,088 And her most famous student, 25 00:01:01,112 --> 00:01:02,406 Rosa Parks. 26 00:01:02,430 --> 00:01:05,039 She said Septima Clark was the one who taught her 27 00:01:05,063 --> 00:01:07,007 the peaceful act of resistance. 28 00:01:07,031 --> 00:01:08,258 And when she sat down, 29 00:01:08,282 --> 00:01:10,880 she inspired a nation to stand. 30 00:01:12,174 --> 00:01:14,662 These were just three of her 10,000 students. 31 00:01:14,686 --> 00:01:17,603 These women stood on the front lines of change, 32 00:01:17,627 --> 00:01:19,110 and by doing so, 33 00:01:19,134 --> 00:01:22,481 they taught people to read in her Citizenship School model 34 00:01:22,505 --> 00:01:26,690 and empowered 700,000 new voters. 35 00:01:26,714 --> 00:01:27,869 And that's not it. 36 00:01:27,893 --> 00:01:31,091 She created a new culture of social activism. 37 00:01:31,761 --> 00:01:35,018 Pete Seeger said it was Septima Clark who changed the lyrics 38 00:01:35,042 --> 00:01:36,627 to the old gospel song 39 00:01:36,651 --> 00:01:38,736 and made the anthem we all know: 40 00:01:38,760 --> 00:01:40,401 "We Shall Overcome." 41 00:01:41,467 --> 00:01:43,678 Vanessa Garrison: Now, many of you may know us. 42 00:01:43,702 --> 00:01:46,179 We are the cofounders of GirlTrek, 43 00:01:46,203 --> 00:01:49,932 the largest health organization for Black women in America. 44 00:01:50,335 --> 00:01:51,675 Our mission is simple: 45 00:01:52,292 --> 00:01:53,978 ask Black women, 46 00:01:54,609 --> 00:01:57,537 80 percent of whom are over a healthy body weight, 47 00:01:57,561 --> 00:02:00,910 to walk outside of their front door every day 48 00:02:00,934 --> 00:02:04,952 to establish a lifesaving habit of walking; 49 00:02:05,972 --> 00:02:09,384 in doing so, ignite a radical movement 50 00:02:09,408 --> 00:02:12,749 in which Black women reverse the devastating impacts 51 00:02:12,773 --> 00:02:14,088 of chronic disease, 52 00:02:14,112 --> 00:02:16,413 reclaim the streets of their neighborhoods, 53 00:02:16,437 --> 00:02:19,242 create a new culture of health for their families 54 00:02:19,266 --> 00:02:21,975 and stand on the front lines for justice. 55 00:02:21,999 --> 00:02:25,078 Today, all across America, 56 00:02:25,102 --> 00:02:30,180 more than 100,000 Black women are wearing this GirlTrek blue shirt 57 00:02:30,204 --> 00:02:32,611 as they move through their communities -- 58 00:02:32,635 --> 00:02:34,369 a heroic force. 59 00:02:34,983 --> 00:02:38,157 We walk in the footsteps of Septima Clark. 60 00:02:38,478 --> 00:02:42,002 She gave us a blueprint for change-making. 61 00:02:42,852 --> 00:02:45,573 One, to have a bold idea, 62 00:02:45,597 --> 00:02:47,611 bigger than anyone is comfortable with. 63 00:02:47,635 --> 00:02:51,774 To two: root down in the cultural traditions of your community 64 00:02:51,798 --> 00:02:55,050 and lean heavily on what has come before. 65 00:02:55,074 --> 00:02:57,580 To three: name it -- 66 00:02:57,604 --> 00:03:01,351 that one thing that everyone is willing to work hard for; 67 00:03:01,375 --> 00:03:06,851 a ridiculously simple goal that doesn't just benefit the individual 68 00:03:06,875 --> 00:03:08,440 but the village around them. 69 00:03:09,906 --> 00:03:11,069 And to, lastly: 70 00:03:12,529 --> 00:03:15,240 never ask permission to save your own life. 71 00:03:15,730 --> 00:03:19,560 It is our fundamental right as human beings 72 00:03:19,584 --> 00:03:22,922 to solve our own problems. 73 00:03:25,578 --> 00:03:29,589 TMD: So to the women all out there gathered in your living rooms, 74 00:03:29,613 --> 00:03:32,616 rooting for us, acting crazy on social media right now -- 75 00:03:32,640 --> 00:03:33,799 we see you. 76 00:03:33,823 --> 00:03:34,831 (Laughter) 77 00:03:34,855 --> 00:03:37,293 We see you every day. We love you. 78 00:03:37,317 --> 00:03:38,666 You are not alone, 79 00:03:38,690 --> 00:03:41,501 and our bigger work starts now. 80 00:03:41,525 --> 00:03:44,121 VG: You got us onto this stage -- 81 00:03:44,145 --> 00:03:45,649 your leadership; 82 00:03:45,673 --> 00:03:48,416 auditing blighted streets in Detroit; 83 00:03:48,440 --> 00:03:51,784 working with hospitals and health care systems in Harlem; 84 00:03:51,808 --> 00:03:57,264 praying over the streets of Sacramento, Charlotte, Brooklyn, Flint 85 00:03:57,288 --> 00:04:00,190 and every community that has seen trauma; 86 00:04:00,214 --> 00:04:02,760 changing traffic patterns, making your streets safer; 87 00:04:02,784 --> 00:04:04,295 and most importantly, 88 00:04:04,319 --> 00:04:06,948 standing as role models. 89 00:04:06,972 --> 00:04:10,939 And it all started with your commitment to start walking, 90 00:04:10,963 --> 00:04:13,658 your agreement to organize your friends and family 91 00:04:13,682 --> 00:04:16,316 and your belief in our broader mission. 92 00:04:17,017 --> 00:04:20,067 TMD: It's important to me that everyone in this room understands 93 00:04:20,101 --> 00:04:22,428 exactly how change-making works in GirlTrek. 94 00:04:22,452 --> 00:04:26,628 One well-trained organizer has the power to change the behavior 95 00:04:26,652 --> 00:04:27,873 of 100 of her friends. 96 00:04:27,897 --> 00:04:29,063 We know that is true, 97 00:04:29,087 --> 00:04:32,212 because the [1,000] women blowing up social media right now 98 00:04:32,236 --> 00:04:37,603 have already inspired over 100,000 women to walk. 99 00:04:38,640 --> 00:04:43,304 (Applause) 100 00:04:44,282 --> 00:04:46,000 But that is not nearly enough. 101 00:04:46,766 --> 00:04:50,580 And so our goal is to create critical mass. 102 00:04:51,341 --> 00:04:52,611 And in order to do that, 103 00:04:52,635 --> 00:04:56,975 we have an audacious plan to scale our intervention. 104 00:04:57,646 --> 00:04:59,644 A thousand organizers is not enough. 105 00:05:00,192 --> 00:05:04,218 GirlTrek is going to create the next Citizenship School. 106 00:05:04,242 --> 00:05:09,683 And in doing so, we will train 10,000 frontline health activists 107 00:05:09,707 --> 00:05:12,599 and deploy them into the highest-need communities in America. 108 00:05:12,623 --> 00:05:14,697 Because when we do, we will disrupt disease; 109 00:05:14,721 --> 00:05:16,580 we will create a new culture of health. 110 00:05:16,604 --> 00:05:18,962 And what we will do is create a support system 111 00:05:18,986 --> 00:05:22,420 for one million Black women to walk to save their own lives. 112 00:05:22,785 --> 00:05:27,274 (Applause) 113 00:05:29,276 --> 00:05:31,725 And our training is unparalleled. 114 00:05:32,639 --> 00:05:33,939 I just want you to imagine. 115 00:05:33,963 --> 00:05:36,091 It's like a revival, tent-like festival, 116 00:05:36,115 --> 00:05:39,390 not unlike the civil rights movement teach-ins. 117 00:05:39,414 --> 00:05:41,885 And we're going to go all across the country. 118 00:05:41,909 --> 00:05:44,179 It is the biggest announcement this week: 119 00:05:44,203 --> 00:05:47,334 Vanessa and I and a team of masterful teachers, 120 00:05:47,358 --> 00:05:49,696 all to culminate next year, 121 00:05:49,720 --> 00:05:51,437 on sacred ground, 122 00:05:51,461 --> 00:05:53,365 in Selma, Alabama, 123 00:05:53,389 --> 00:05:59,018 to create a new annual tradition that we are calling "Summer of Selma." 124 00:05:59,482 --> 00:06:02,070 VG: Summer of Selma will be an annual pilgrimage 125 00:06:02,094 --> 00:06:04,093 that will include a walk -- 126 00:06:04,117 --> 00:06:05,679 54 miles, 127 00:06:05,703 --> 00:06:08,721 the sacred route from Selma to Montgomery. 128 00:06:08,745 --> 00:06:11,379 It will also include rigorous training. 129 00:06:11,403 --> 00:06:12,630 Picture it, 130 00:06:12,654 --> 00:06:16,750 as women come to learn organizing and recruitment strategies, 131 00:06:16,774 --> 00:06:18,682 to study exercise science, 132 00:06:18,706 --> 00:06:20,447 to take nutrition classes, 133 00:06:20,471 --> 00:06:22,197 to learn storytelling, 134 00:06:22,221 --> 00:06:25,291 to become certified as outdoor trip leaders 135 00:06:25,315 --> 00:06:27,547 and community advocates. 136 00:06:28,474 --> 00:06:30,376 TMD: This is going to be unprecedented. 137 00:06:30,400 --> 00:06:33,327 It's going to be a moment in time like a cultural institution, 138 00:06:33,341 --> 00:06:34,463 and in fact, 139 00:06:34,487 --> 00:06:37,139 it's going to be the Woodstock of Black Girl Healing. 140 00:06:37,163 --> 00:06:38,833 (Laughter) 141 00:06:38,857 --> 00:06:41,932 (Applause) 142 00:06:43,012 --> 00:06:44,266 VG: And the need -- 143 00:06:45,605 --> 00:06:47,421 it's more urgent than ever. 144 00:06:48,691 --> 00:06:53,088 We are losing our communities' greatest resource. 145 00:06:54,569 --> 00:06:58,068 Black women are dying in plain sight. 146 00:06:59,317 --> 00:07:02,318 And not only is no one talking about it, 147 00:07:03,075 --> 00:07:05,192 but we refuse to acknowledge 148 00:07:05,216 --> 00:07:09,374 that the source of this crisis is rooted in the same injustice 149 00:07:09,398 --> 00:07:12,554 that first propelled the civil rights movement. 150 00:07:13,234 --> 00:07:16,941 On December 30 of 2017, 151 00:07:17,717 --> 00:07:18,957 Erica Garner, 152 00:07:20,116 --> 00:07:22,451 the daughter of Eric Garner, 153 00:07:22,475 --> 00:07:25,146 a Black man who died on the streets of New York 154 00:07:25,170 --> 00:07:26,974 from a police choke hold, 155 00:07:26,998 --> 00:07:29,300 passed away of a heart attack. 156 00:07:30,276 --> 00:07:32,574 Erica was just 27 years old, 157 00:07:32,598 --> 00:07:34,721 the mother of two children. 158 00:07:35,369 --> 00:07:39,492 She would be one of 137 Black women that day -- 159 00:07:39,516 --> 00:07:42,081 more than 50,000 in the last year -- 160 00:07:42,105 --> 00:07:44,346 to die from a heart-related issue, 161 00:07:45,159 --> 00:07:47,922 many of their hearts broken from trauma. 162 00:07:49,431 --> 00:07:54,442 The impacts of stress on Black women 163 00:07:54,466 --> 00:07:58,294 who send their children and spouses out the door each day, 164 00:07:58,318 --> 00:08:01,433 unsure if they will come home alive; 165 00:08:01,457 --> 00:08:07,767 who work jobs where they are paid 63 cents to every dollar paid to white men; 166 00:08:07,791 --> 00:08:11,112 who live in communities with crumbling infrastructure 167 00:08:11,136 --> 00:08:14,461 with no access to fresh fruits or vegetables; 168 00:08:14,485 --> 00:08:17,776 with little to no walkable or green spaces -- 169 00:08:18,954 --> 00:08:22,800 the impact of this inequality is killing Black women 170 00:08:22,824 --> 00:08:27,963 at higher and faster rates than any other group in the country. 171 00:08:27,987 --> 00:08:30,176 But that is about to change. 172 00:08:30,200 --> 00:08:31,405 It has to. 173 00:08:35,537 --> 00:08:37,108 TMD: So let me tell you a story. 174 00:08:37,890 --> 00:08:39,501 About three weeks ago -- 175 00:08:40,282 --> 00:08:41,828 many of you may have watched -- 176 00:08:41,852 --> 00:08:45,022 Vanessa and I and a team of 10 women walked 100 miles 177 00:08:45,046 --> 00:08:47,077 on the actual Underground Railroad. 178 00:08:47,660 --> 00:08:49,126 We did it in five days -- 179 00:08:49,150 --> 00:08:51,580 five long and beautiful days. 180 00:08:51,604 --> 00:08:53,447 And the world watched. 181 00:08:53,821 --> 00:08:56,154 Three million people watched the live stream. 182 00:08:56,178 --> 00:08:59,265 Some of you in here, the influencers, shared the story. 183 00:08:59,289 --> 00:09:01,716 Urban Radio blasted it across the country. 184 00:09:01,740 --> 00:09:05,293 VG: Even the E! News channel interrupted a story about the Kardashians -- 185 00:09:05,317 --> 00:09:08,397 which, if you asked us, is just a little bit of justice -- 186 00:09:08,421 --> 00:09:09,430 (Laughter) 187 00:09:09,454 --> 00:09:13,376 to report that GirlTrek had made it safely on our hundred-mile journey. 188 00:09:13,400 --> 00:09:18,219 (Applause) 189 00:09:20,429 --> 00:09:22,399 TMD: People were rooting for us. 190 00:09:22,423 --> 00:09:27,163 And they were rooting for us because in this time of confusion and contention, 191 00:09:27,187 --> 00:09:31,350 this journey allowed us all to reflect on what it meant to be American. 192 00:09:32,548 --> 00:09:35,031 We saw America up close and personal as we walked. 193 00:09:35,055 --> 00:09:37,701 We walked through historic towns, 194 00:09:37,725 --> 00:09:39,246 through dense forest, 195 00:09:39,270 --> 00:09:41,702 past former plantations. 196 00:09:41,726 --> 00:09:42,946 And one day, 197 00:09:43,636 --> 00:09:47,128 we walked into a gas station that was also a café, 198 00:09:47,152 --> 00:09:48,520 and it was filled with men. 199 00:09:49,092 --> 00:09:51,813 They were wearing camo and had hunting supplies. 200 00:09:51,837 --> 00:09:55,508 And out front were all of their trucks, and one had a Confederate flag. 201 00:09:55,532 --> 00:09:57,391 And so we left the establishment. 202 00:09:57,415 --> 00:10:00,253 And as we were walking along this narrow strip of road, 203 00:10:00,277 --> 00:10:03,789 a few of the trucks reared by us so close, 204 00:10:04,619 --> 00:10:08,488 and out of their tailpipe was the specter of mob violence. 205 00:10:08,512 --> 00:10:09,878 It was unnerving. 206 00:10:11,232 --> 00:10:12,541 But then it happened. 207 00:10:13,280 --> 00:10:15,777 Right on the border of Maryland and Delaware, 208 00:10:16,840 --> 00:10:18,712 we saw a man standing by his truck. 209 00:10:18,736 --> 00:10:20,175 The tailgate was down. 210 00:10:20,199 --> 00:10:22,016 He had on a brown jacket. 211 00:10:22,040 --> 00:10:23,583 He was standing there awkwardly. 212 00:10:23,607 --> 00:10:26,071 The first two girls in our group, Jewel and Sandria, 213 00:10:26,095 --> 00:10:28,300 they walked back because he looked suspicious. 214 00:10:28,324 --> 00:10:29,331 (Laughter) 215 00:10:29,355 --> 00:10:32,008 But the bigger group, we stopped to give him a chance. 216 00:10:32,032 --> 00:10:33,741 And he walked up to us and he said, 217 00:10:33,765 --> 00:10:35,359 "Hi, my name is Jake Green. 218 00:10:35,746 --> 00:10:37,805 I heard you on Christian radio this morning, 219 00:10:37,829 --> 00:10:40,479 and God told me to bring you supplies." 220 00:10:41,793 --> 00:10:43,627 He brought us water, 221 00:10:43,651 --> 00:10:44,913 he brought us granola, 222 00:10:44,937 --> 00:10:46,444 and he brought us tissue. 223 00:10:47,180 --> 00:10:50,476 And we needed tissue because we had just walked through a nor'easter; 224 00:10:50,500 --> 00:10:52,791 it was 29 degrees, it was sleeting on our faces. 225 00:10:52,815 --> 00:10:57,456 Our sneakers and our socks were frozen and wet and frozen again. 226 00:10:57,480 --> 00:11:01,128 We needed that tissue more than he could have possibly understood. 227 00:11:01,152 --> 00:11:02,942 So on that day, in that moment, 228 00:11:02,966 --> 00:11:06,575 Jake Green renewed my faith in God for sure, 229 00:11:06,599 --> 00:11:09,215 but he renewed my faith in humanity. 230 00:11:10,196 --> 00:11:12,162 We have a choice to make. 231 00:11:14,010 --> 00:11:19,024 In America, we can fall further into the darkness of discord, or not. 232 00:11:19,048 --> 00:11:20,258 And I am here to tell you 233 00:11:20,282 --> 00:11:23,007 that the women of GirlTrek are walking through the streets 234 00:11:23,031 --> 00:11:25,284 with a light that cannot be extinguished. 235 00:11:25,308 --> 00:11:28,163 VG: They are also walking through the streets with a mission 236 00:11:28,187 --> 00:11:32,687 as clear and as powerful as the women who marched in Montgomery: 237 00:11:32,711 --> 00:11:35,158 that disease stops here, 238 00:11:35,182 --> 00:11:37,491 that trauma stops here. 239 00:11:38,769 --> 00:11:40,818 And with your support 240 00:11:40,842 --> 00:11:43,336 and in our ancestors' footsteps, 241 00:11:43,360 --> 00:11:49,153 these 10,000 newly trained activists will launch the largest health revolution 242 00:11:49,177 --> 00:11:51,156 this country has ever seen. 243 00:11:51,730 --> 00:11:56,767 And they will return to their communities and model the best of human flourishing. 244 00:11:57,675 --> 00:11:59,088 And we -- 245 00:11:59,112 --> 00:12:00,954 we will all celebrate. 246 00:12:00,978 --> 00:12:03,921 Because like Jake Green understood, 247 00:12:03,945 --> 00:12:06,463 our fates our intertwined. 248 00:12:07,321 --> 00:12:09,474 Septima Clark once said, 249 00:12:10,657 --> 00:12:15,083 "The air has finally gotten to a place where we can breathe it together." 250 00:12:16,231 --> 00:12:17,446 And yet, 251 00:12:18,334 --> 00:12:23,835 the haunting last words of Eric Garner were: "I can't breathe." 252 00:12:24,671 --> 00:12:28,358 And his daughter Erica died at 27 years old, 253 00:12:28,382 --> 00:12:30,838 still seeking justice. 254 00:12:30,862 --> 00:12:32,013 So we -- 255 00:12:32,037 --> 00:12:34,947 we're going to keep doing Septima's work 256 00:12:34,971 --> 00:12:37,375 until her words become reality, 257 00:12:38,206 --> 00:12:41,603 until Black women are no longer dying, 258 00:12:43,891 --> 00:12:47,490 until we can all breathe the air together. 259 00:12:47,895 --> 00:12:49,046 Thank you. 260 00:12:49,070 --> 00:12:53,793 (Applause)