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Bernice Reagon Urges Graduates to Throw Themselves "Against Those Things in Life That Should Not Be"

New York, N.Y., May 15, 2001- Bernice Reagon, a folklorist and founder of the musical group Sweet Honey in the Rock, charmed 540 graduating Barnard students with snatches of a gospel tune, and then urged them to "throw yourselves against things in life that should not be."

Reagon, who was awarded the Barnard Medal of Distinction, one of the College's highest honors, spoke before an audience of 3,000 packed onto Lehman Lawn and Altschul Plaza for Barnard's 109th commencement ceremony.

Reagon began by singing softly, with gathering strength, a gospel melody beginning: "I'm your child, remember me... Lord, remember me," and soon had the audience joining in. To be remembered, she urged, "live your life in such a way that your actions transform the space you operate in. It's about throwing yourself against those things in life that should not be."

For example, she said, Malawi is an African nation of 10 million and 1 million AIDS victims; the President wants to drill for oil in protected areas; and we live in a culture "where one of the first things a female learns is to be afraid because she is female and is preyed on by other members of the species."

Reagon said she loved teaching 19th-century American history because it was the period in which "slavery was ripped out of the country." That, she said, occurred because "some thought there was something corrupting about having, in a country that talked about freedom, some people own other people."

"The world is reshaped by people who actually offer their lives in the space and place of those things that should not be experienced," she said. "You sit on a mountain of humanity, you are the living archeological evidence of people who came before you," she said, adding that their success means "that you can do the same for somebody else."

And, she said, there is plenty of reshaping to do in what she described as "a young country" in which people of her color historically couldn't get a glass of Coke at a lunch counter. "We haven't even reached teen-age - and do you remember what that was like!"

She concluded: "I'm suggesting that you have to try to create things that are not here. The things we face in this society are waiting for you to visualize how we can begin to address them."

Also receiving the Barnard Medal of Distinction were:

  • Maxine Greene '38, Wm. F. Russell Professor Emerita of Teachers College and a prolific American philosopher of education and aesthetics;
  • Morris Dees, Chief Trial Counsel of The Southern Poverty Law Center, a civil rights lawyer who has committed his life to putting hate crimes on trial;
  • And Susan Hendrickson, famed diver and dinosaur hunter, who discovered the largest fossilized Tyrannosaurus Rex ever found - a find that was later named "Tyrannosaurus Sue" in her honor.

Barnard's ceremony is officially called the Presentation of Degree candidates. The graduates will formally receive their degrees, signed by Barnard President Shapiro and Columbia University President George Rupp, on Wednesday, May 16 at the Columbia University Commencement.

Shapiro praised the Class of 2001 as "particularly innovative, creative and energetic. You have thrived at Barnard -- a pretty good indicator for the future... you are challenging, hard-working and risk-taking learners, qualities that you share with generations of Barnard women (and that certainly keep the faculty on their toes - and make teaching here a joy) and attributes that bode well for your success." [click here for the full text of President Shapiro's speech]

Shapiro urged the graduates to embrace the possibility of the occasional failure on the way to success. "You may have had some inkling by now that success does not happen without taking some risks... and that you can't take a risk without the possibility of a little failure."

Provost and Dean of the Faculty Elizabeth Boylan told graduates that they were part of "a very privileged minority with a whole lot of understanding and learning and vision to offer the world." If the world's population were shrunk to 100 people, she noted, only 1 would have a college education. [click here for the full text of Provost Boylan's speech]

Erin E. Fredrick, president of the senior class, told her classmates they had arrived on Morningside Heights "the day Seinfeld went off the air" and witnessed a President impeached and a First Lady elected. "We may be unsure of what directions our lives will take after Barnard, but we can be confident that we are prepared ... and as a good friend said to me, I don't really want to think about a life after Barnard, but I'm excited to carry my Barnard bag there."

Jyoti Menon, president of the Student Government Association, recalled a widening circle of experience, in libraries, at internships, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museo del Bario, and in the audience at Blue Man Group and Rent. "The culture of empowerment at Barnard encouraged us to challenge ourselves," she said.

In her Academic Reflections, given by the winner of a speaking competition, Colleen D. O'Meara recounted her experience preparing and performing a solo dance piece. She had practiced many times, but to her surprise, just before the performance, her instructor, Associate Professor of dance Donlin Foreman told her to face the back wall and, "when you have something to say, turn and begin."

O'Meara realized Foreman was pushing her to a new level of performance and that "he wanted me to actually feel the dance rather than simply execute it ... I was paralyzed and but also invigorated by my fear ... So, I turned around .... And I danced - for the first time."

"I urge each graduate to embrace her moments. These moments move you, because they originate from deep within the mind and body. Trust this movement, allow it to take you to the next stage of life. Remember how Barnard made these moments possible for you. But, more significantly, remember that Barnard provided you with the confidence and knowledge to prosper between the moments."

Bernice Johnson Reagon

Presenting the Barnard Medal of Distinction to Bernice Johnson Reagon, Lauren Porsch '01 told her: "The impact of both the music and the lyrics on a worldwide audience can hardly be overestimated, for Sweet Honey chronicles each new social blight, exhorting, empowering, and, as Alice Walker once said, inoculating "against disease of racist and sexist selfishness, envy, and greed." [Click here to read the full citation for Reagon's Barnard Medal of Distinction]

Reagon, famed composer and singer in the 19th century southern tradition, founded Sweet Honey in The Rock, a world-renowned African-American women's a cappella ensemble, in 1973. A historian and scholar, Reagon is a distinguished professor of history at American University and a Curator Emeritus at the Smithsonian Institution, the National Museum of American History, where she served for 20 years.

Reagon has served as a music consultant, composer, and performer for several award-winning film and video projects; in 1989, she was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship for her work as an artist and scholar of African-American culture. She researched, produced and hosted the groundbreaking Smithsonian Institution and National Public Radio series, Wade in The Water: African American Sacred Music Traditions, which began broadcast in 1994 and won a Peabody Award. Reagon specializes in the African-American oral, performance, and protest traditions. After an extraordinary three decades, Reagon remains the driving force of Sweet Honey in the Rock. The much-acclaimed group draws from the rich tradition of African-American choral music, beginning in slavery when Africans worked in the plantations, singing to the rhythm of their forced labor. These basic work songs formed the beginning of gospel music. As a solo singer, Reagon describes herself as a "song leader in the nineteenth century African-American choral tradition in search of a congregation."

In the 1960s, during the Civil Rights Movement, Reagon was a member of the original SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee) Freedom Singers. The Freedom Singers traveled the country, attending meetings and protests and were often arrested. The spirit of the Freedom Singers lives on in Sweet Honey in the Rock. Reagon's group has toured internationally throughout the years; their song 'Emergency' was nominated for a Grammy in 1988. In reviews of Sweet Honey's performances, the words "mesmerizing" and "overwhelming" appear frequently. The Sydney Morning Herald wrote of Sweet Honey's concert in Australia in 1990: "[They] radiate strength and beauty...in more than 20 years of reviewing concerts, I have never been so deeply moved and so elated by a performance."

Reagon is the author and editor of several books, including: If You Don't Go, Don't Hinder Me: The African American Sacred Song Tradition (2000); How I Got Over: Clara Ward and the World Famous Ward Singers (1997); We'll Understand it Better by and by: Pioneering African American Gospel Composers (1993); We Who Believe in Freedom: Sweet Honey in the Rock: Still on the Journey (1993); and Black American Culture and Scholarship (1985). Reagon also produced the landmark documentary anthology, Voices of the Civil Rights Movement: Black American Freedom Songs 1960-1965, a three-record collection with accompanying booklet for the Smithsonian Collection of Classic Recordings.

Publisher's Weekly wrote of Reagon's anthology, We'll Understand It Better by and by: Pioneering African American Gospel Composers: "Reagon presents a superb collection of essays--by academics who are also gospel performers or record producers -- that focus on major figures in black gospel music: Charles A. Tindley, Lucie Campbell Williams, Thomas A. Dorsey, William H. Brewster Sr., Roberta Martin and Kenneth Morris."

Maxine Greene '38

Presenting the Barnard Medal of Distinction to Maxine Greene '38, Dr. Susan R. Sacks, Senior Lecturer and Director of Barnard's Education Program, told her: "you exemplify your own belief that freedom means accepting responsibility both for one's experience of the world and for the others who share this world." [[Click here to read the full citation for Greene's Barnard Medal of Distinction]

Greene, prolific author and the William F. Russell Professor Emeritus of Philosophy and Education at Teachers College, has achieved numerous honors and distinctions in the field of education. After graduating Phi Beta Kappa from Barnard College in 1938, Greene went on to earn both an M.A. and a Ph.D. in education from New York University. Greene was awarded the Fulbright Fellowship in 1991 to study in New Zealand, and has received various honorary degrees from such institutions as Lehigh and Hofstra Universities as well as from Bank Street College.

Greene was the recipient of two Educator of the Year Awards from Columbia University in 1973 and from Ohio State University in 1978. In 1988, Barnard College presented Greene with its Woman of Achievement Award. Dr. Greene was also president of the Philosophy Society of America and is a former president of the American Educational Studies Association.

Dr. Greene is well known for the landmark achievement of becoming the first tenured female faculty member at Teachers College, where she has been a professor since 1965. Greene holds a strong interest in aesthetic education, a topic she frequently covers in her lectures. In 1998, she donated over 200 art, philosophy and education-related books and publications to the Teachers College Milbank Memorial Library.

Dr. Greene's most recent published works include: A Light in Dark Times: Maxine Greene and the Unfinished Conversation (1998); Releasing the Imagination: Essays on Education, the Arts, and Social Change (1995); Retrieving the Language of Compassion: The Education Professor in Search of Community (1990); and The Dialectic of Freedom (1987).

Susan Hendrickson

Nan Rothschild, Professor of Anthropology, in presenting the Barnard Medal of Distinction to Susan Hendrickson, told her: "You have always valued scientific knowledge above personal gain, and have given researchers and museums access to whatever you discover. We are privileged to count you as a true member of the academy." [Click here to read the full citation for Hendrickson's Barnard Medal of Distinction]

Hendrickson, famed diver and fossil hunter, emerged as a key player in the world of archeological exploration in 1990 with her discovery of a 65-million-year-old Tyrannosaurus Rex in the badlands of South Dakota. It is the largest and most complete T. Rex of the 22 ever found; her discovery was unveiled to the public on May 17, 2000, at Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History.

Hendrickson describes her reaction at the time of the T. Rex discovery by saying, "It was like I was a sculptor - the feeling is that you are creating her from the rock, almost bringing her to life. You feel like she waited for you....it's a thrill that defies description. It's chemical, physical, emotional - it's a body experience." Another significant feature of this remarkable discovery is its gender; the T. Rex uncovered by Hendrickson is a female, while the majority of T. Rexes have tended to be males. The recently revealed dinosaur has been titled "Tyrannosaurus Sue," named after Hendrickson.

Hendrickson is best known for allowing scientists and museums full access to the materials she finds. She is not formally trained and does not hold a Ph.D., but she has become highly respected within her field nonetheless. Hendrickson received an honorary degree in May of 2000 from the University of Illinois at Chicago for her "expansion of knowledge and performance of exemplary service" with regard to teaching, service and research, according to Professor David Sokol. Professor Donald Marshall described Hendrickson as "a determined person with a passion for learning and a willingness to pursue her passion."

Hendrickson's intellectual passion is clearly demonstrated in her future plans for an expedition to Alexandria, Egypt. There she plans to explore its royal port, the remains of Cleopatra's palace, Marc Antony's home, the temple of Poseidon and a shipwreck. Hendrickson says that she would ideally love to find "a family of T. Rexes buried together" on her next archeological adventure.

Morris Dees

Presenting the Barnard Medal of Distinction to Morris Dees, Judith Kaye '58, Chief Justice of the New York State Court of Appeals, told him: "You enlighten by example, and despite ruthless attacks on your person and your character, you retain an ardent belief in the viability of universal justice and equality for all groups and individuals." [[Click here to read the full citation for Dees's Barnard Medal of Distinction]

Dees, a pioneering civil rights lawyer and activist, is the Cofounder and Chief Trial Counsel of the Southern Poverty Law Center. Born in Shorter, Alabama, Dees attended the University of Alabama and graduated from the University of Alabama School of Law in 1960. He was finance director for Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern in 1972, served as former President Carter's national finance director in 1976, and as national finance chairman for Senator Kennedy's 1980 presidential campaign. He originated the idea of a Civil Rights Memorial that was dedicated in Montgomery, Alabama in 1989. In the 1990s, he concentrated on suing white supremacist groups. Dees' autobiography, A Season For Justice (1991), was made into a television special in 1992.

Dees has made his life's work bringing hatemongers and racists to justice. He has excelled in convincing juries that racist leaders should be held financially accountable for their hate crimes, and in the process bankrupted them. Now 64, Dees' life has been threatened many times, but he continues to fight for the poor and disenfranchised. Dees' office was firebombed in 1983 and gunmen have been spotted on the grounds of his home several times. He has even been challenged to a duel "to the death" by a Klansman. Dees wrote in his 1991 autobiography, A Season For Justice, "It struck me I didn't have to count sheep to fall asleep. I could count potential assassins."

His second book, Hate on Trial: The Case Against America's Most Dangerous Neo-Nazi, was published in 1993. It chronicles the trial and $12.5 million judgment against white supremacist Tom Metzger and his White Aryan Resistance group for their responsibility in the beating death by Skinheads of a young black student in Portland, Oregon. His latest book, Gathering Storm: America's Militia Threat (1996), exposes the danger posed by today's domestic terrorist groups.

Though known as a civil rights lawyer, Dees feels he is not a spokesperson for any single group. He once said: "I'm not for blacks or whites. I'm for a fair shot."

Barnard College, founded in 1889, is a highly selective independent college for women affiliated with Columbia University in New York City. Barnard, whose mission is to support the talent, vision, and spirit of all women throughout their academic, social, and professional lives, has a long-standing tradition of graduating women who become leaders in business, medicine, government, science, education, public service and the arts.

Contact:
Petra Tuomi, Public Affairs, 212-854-7907
Lucas Held, Public Affairs, 212-854-7583

 

An independent college for women in New York City affiliated with Columbia University