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Local community activist Georgia F. Allen recently helped the AARP Chapter 5119 - Princess Anne in Virginia Beach kick off Black History Month as their guest speaker.
Allen is the first vice president of the Virginia Beach NAACP and its religious affairs chairperson. Her role is to connect the NAACP with faith-based groups in the community. She said she strongly believes that “united we bargain; divided we beg.” She explained that if a large enough community presence supports an initiative, its needs will be heard as requests are made to the local government and up to the state legislature. Otherwise, she warned, a divided community must beg for things that they should be entitled to.
Allen has a unique approach in the way that she looks at Black history. Her eye on the prize is not about the usual entitlements of education and representation. She views the “prize” as the community’s most valuable resource—the youth. She spoke about keeping an eye on the youth and doing what we can to enhance their contributions rather than focusing or looking back at the legacy of African Americans in the past.
This perspective challenges the Black community to be creative in celebrating the contributions that youth and even young children are making to the present and will make in the future and celebrate what she calls “Black excellence.”
Allen shared stories about how youth are making a difference in their communities. One touching story is about a 7-year-old Virginia Beach girl who became engaged in politics by asking if she could attend a General Assembly session in Richmond with her great-grandmother. Allen said this is a wonderful start as the 7-year-old is getting a head start in thinking about issues and how they affect her, even though she is too young to vote.
Allen stressed the importance of teaching children of color their worth and value. Seeing the youth as a prize makes it the community’s responsibility to open the doors of opportunity.
We need to reclaim the days when the family, along with neighbors, schools and churches had a role in raising our children, she said. We should no longer say, “it is not my child.” Each child must have love and support from the community that is investing in their well-being.
The charge that Allen asked the chapter to consider in stimulating community involvement among the youth and young adults includes:
Allen stressed that communities need to focus on all our children with love and support. That will open the way for education to encourage positive community involvement. The young people will have a larger voice that can remove barriers to the success of the African American community for the future.