Journalist Williams Talks of Leadership, Life


LAKEVILLE — News correspondent and political analyst Juan Williams spoke this week to students and faculty at The Hotchkiss School on Friday, Feb. 16, about their place in the world, and about the black community in America.

Williams is an award-winning reporter and writer for documentaries. He is currently a political analyst for the Fox News Channel and senior correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR).

He is also the author of, "Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America—and What We Can Do About It."

He was invited by the Black and Hispanic Student Alliance and the English department. February is Black History Month.

Williams spoke to the students in the audience about expectations, not only from their parents but also from the communities they live in.

"Your parents and the larger society will try and define that for you, expecting you to get good grades, go to college, perhaps graduate school, get a job, get married."

Society will look to the students as leaders — but leadership is not something you pursue as a career objective, he said.

Many of the world’s great leaders, including Nelson Mandela, Martin Luther King Jr., and Thurgood Marshall, were pursuing other goals when they were pulled off course, toward a greater challenge.

"You are not chosen for leadership," Williams said. "Sometimes the power to use your leadership skills will come into your life in a surprising way. You have to have eyes that are open to the challenges of this generation."

Williams provided some statistics: One out of four black people in the U.S. lives in poverty; 70 percent of black children are born out of wedlock; 50 percent of black and Hispanic children drop out of high school; and black and Hispanic young men make up the largest proportion of men in jails.

"There is a persistence in the American narrative of portraying black people as less than human. It is a dominant theme in movies and music, and places a tremendous psychological burden on a black person in this country."

Black television and rap "position black Americans as gangsters," Williams said, pointing out that it is just another version of the minstrel, a subject he covers in depth in his book. "This is damaging in terms of what is put into white people’s minds, and pernicious about what it puts into black people’s minds about their racial identity. What does it really say to a young black person?"

Williams counseled the students to "open your eyes to social issues around you. You will see inequities — start to act, be a risk taker. Taking risks is the first priority for leadership. You have to be willing to challenge the popular culture. You have to get involved."

Williams concluded by saying, "Use the life that you have been given to make a difference. The life I would want for you is one that will resonate long after you are gone."

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