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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 2021)
Page 22 M artin L uther K ing J r . 2021 special edition January 13, 2021 Stepping Up and Standing Up Martin Luther King Jr. c ontinued fRoM p age 9 She went on to later direct a neighborhood health clinic in Seat- tle, and in the mid-1980s joined the Black Women’s Health Project in Atlanta, where she served for eight years as National Self-Help Direc- tor. Following that, she moved to Austin, Texas to work for the Texas Urban League and was special ad- visor to then-Texas governor Anne Richards. After returning to Portland in 2007, Gary-Smith was a director for Cascadia Behavioral Health Care and in 2011, was chosen to lead the MRG Foundation, a lead- ing social and racial justice funder. She has received many honors over the years, and last March was named an Outstanding Oregon Woman of Achievement by Gov. Kate Brown. After all those years of work, Gary-Smith decided to retire, but that didn’t last long. When former Portland NAACP President E.D. Mondainé resigned in October af- ter being exposed in the Portland Mercury for alleged physical and sexual assault, she answered the call. Gary-Smith was not sorry to see him go. She said she and female other members of the Portland NAACP had been overlooked and experienced sexism and ageism under that past leadership, which was “very male dominated,” she said. Not any more. The new leader- ship, with Gary-Smith as president, is almost all female now, she said. “We do shared leadership,” she said. “I believe in learning and leading, and that you can do both.” Gary-Smith didn’t accept run- ning for chapter president right away, but after many entreaties to lead the organization, she eventu- ally decided she had to follow her mother’s advice to “walk the talk.” Though she had planned to re- lax and travel in retirement, she answered the call to lead and then recruited more young women of all stripes, including more radical members to join her. “I was quite radical back in the day,” she said. “I know how to sit at tables, but sometimes you need to flip the table and build a new ta- Sharon Gary-Smith ble that seats more people.” She describes herself as “an angry, gentle Black woman,” who knows how to channel that anger into constructive action. “Age and experience tempers you,” she said. “I know how to sit in board rooms…and I know those marching around the building — that used to be me.” But she has high hopes for the future of the Portland NAACP, where membership and donations skyrocketed after the killing of George Floyd by police officers in Minneapolis. Support for civ- il rights and the NAACP have grown from many white folks who feel guilty about the treatment of Blacks in this country, and that is a good thing, she said. “I don’t want guilt to be the only reason they donated,” she said. “I want them to be involved and say, ‘How can I be an ally for racial jus- tice in this country?’ “ The guiding light for Gary- Smith’s leadership are the teach- ings of Dr. King, she said, a philos- ophy for peace and racial progress that applies to everyone. “Whites can be our accomplic- es,” she said. “Not just because they felt bad about George Floyd, but about the continued racism in this country, and the unequal dis- proportionate harm to us.” Now is the time for reckoning, for dialogue and for the nation to heal, she said. “It is time for great opportuni- ties and the NAACP should be at the forefront for the right reasons, with others who are seeking jus- tice,” Gary-Smith said.