Remembering Dr. Dorothy I. Height, March 24, 1912 – April 20, 2010
‘A One-of-a-Kind American Heroine’
President Barack Obama delivered a passionate eulogy at Dr. Dorothy I.
Height’s funeral service.
By Paul R. Pace, News Staff
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| Illustration: John Michael Yanson |
NASW honored the remarkable life and ongoing legacy left by
Dr. Dorothy I. Height, who died April 20 at age 98.
“I think we have lost a giant leader,” said NASW Executive
Director Elizabeth J. Clark. “She was a remarkable woman who worked for not
only civil rights, but also women’s rights in general.”
Height was most widely known as the longtime president of the
National Council of Negro Women and the godmother of the civil rights movement,
and for helping to integrate the YWCA.
She was also a proud social worker and NASW Foundation Social
Work Pioneerw. She was honored recently with the association’s Lifetime
Achievement Award in Social Work.
In an effort to continue her legacy of equality and human
rights, the Dorothy I. Height and Whitney M. Young Social Work Reinvestment Act
(H.R. 795, S. 686) was reintroduced in the 111th Congress. It proposes that the
Secretary of Health and Human Services create a Social Work Reinvestment
Commission to address policy issues associated with recruitment, retention,
research and reinvestment in the social work profession.
Height’s support of the bill was in step with her busy
schedule in Washington. She never slowed down — even as her age approached the
century mark. At the time of her death, she was the board chairwoman of the Leadership
Conference on Civil and Human Rights and president emeritus of the National
Council of Negro Women.
She visited the White House 21 times in recent months and was
joined by Clark for several White House ceremonies that promoted social work
advocacy.
President Barack Obama delivered a passionate eulogy at
Height’s funeral service at the Washington National Cathedral. He was joined by
first lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joseph Biden and House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi.
The president said he came to know the civil rights icon in
the early days of his presidential campaign. She “took part in our discussions
around health care reform in her final months,” he said, noting she was hard to
miss, thanks in part to Height’s affinity for colorful hats.
Height was raised in a different age, beyond the experience of
many today, the president explained.
“Jim Crow ruled the South,” he said. “The Klan was on the rise
— a powerful political force. Lynching was all too often the penalty for the
offense of black skin. Slaves had been freed within living memory, but too
often, their children, their grandchildren remained captive, because they were
denied justice and denied equality, denied opportunity, denied a chance to
pursue their dreams.”
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From June 2010 NASW News. © 2010 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
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