Editorās note: Once a month, the National Interest column will tackle broader questions about what the country should do to increase educational opportunities for black youths.
āI still remember my first trip to UVA, to the hospital, was in the ā50s,ā the renowned physician Vivian Pinn recounted to board directors of the National Medical Association and me in a noisy Washington, D.C., restaurant three days before Halloween. āI was there because my grandfather was on the segregated ward in the old hospital.ā
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I leaned across the table, eager to make sure I caught every nugget of wisdom Pinn dispensed. She was the only woman and person of color to graduate from her University of Virginia Medical Schoolās Class of 1967, and most notably, she went on to become the director of the Office of Research on Womenās Health at the National Institutes of Health, a position she retired from in 2011.
āAnd to then think,ā Pinn continued, āthat more than 50 years later, Iād come back here [Charlottesville, Va.] to see a major building with my name on it is pretty amazing.ā
On Sept. 13, 2017, UVA renamed the medical education and research building (formerly known as Jordan Hall) Pinn Hall (schedule conflicts delayed the change that was initially planned for 2016).
Itās amazing indeed, given the past and present context of race relations in Charlottesville. Just one month earlier, torch-toting racists, Klansmen and Confederate sympathizers marched on the University of Virginiaās campus there during a deadly weekend of protests around the removal of a Confederate monument. Three people died before that rally ended.
The built environment is so much more than shelter, urban planning and architectureāit reflects our very commitment to democracy. Our statues are monuments to the state of our democracy as much as they honor our beloved. Our willingness to take down racist traitors also signifies.
To be clear, Confederate monuments are a myopic aggrandizement of a warped historical narrativeāa storyline that rationalizes past and present oppression. White House chief of staff John Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general, no less, perpetuated the Confederate fable in an interview last week by saying that Robert E. Lee, the traitor who fought against the Union and whose statue was at the center of the protest in Charlottesville, was an āhonorable manā and that the Civil War was brought about by a ālack of an ability to compromise.ā
UVA has come a long way in honoring Pinn, but the calamities that transpired a month earlier in Charlottesville show how much further our democracy has to go.
āI hope the image of my name on a building is not seen as a representation of my personal accomplishment,ā said Pinn. āI hope it represents inspiration for black women who face similar battles today to what I dealt with in the past.ā
She knows that her success, while important, cannot substitute for social change that goes beyond individual acceptance and assimilation.
As a black woman, Pinn navigated a white, male-dominated field to serve her country by literally healing victims of physical and social ailments at the NIH.
Itās more than a notion to think that racism and sexism kill more people than diabetes. Middle-class, educated black women exhibit worse health outcomes than their white peers. Black women canāt educate or buy their way to better health outcomes, because racism and sexism are like airborne pollutants, affecting everyone who comes in contact with them.
We have to change the social, political and, yes, the built environment that reflects our world, to improve conditions.
UVA, a public university, rightly showed gratitude to Pinn and democracy by naming a building after an authentic hero.
Pinn trained hundreds of physicians in her academic appointments at Howard University College of Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Tufts University. As a director at NIH, she mentored researchers and advanced policies that would improve outcomes for women. As past president of the National Medical Association, a nonprofit professional organization representing black doctors and their patients, she projected the voice of disenfranchised communities.
Itās hard to imagine how much worse off women would be without Pinnās lifeās work, which gets us closer to a more perfect union. We need that UVA hall to bear Pinnās name, to remind us of the values we should honor and celebrate.
The fight around monuments is an extension of blacksā perpetual struggle with claiming spaceāour existential battle for control and representation. From our resistance against highways being built on top of black communities to shuttle whites into suburbs to whites gentrifying formerly redlined districts, the fight to claim space and democracy goes well beyond which monuments are taken down.
Take āEm Down NOLA, a group instrumental in the removal of four Confederate monuments in New Orleans, also demands that the city of New Orleans ādevelop a community-driven process [emphasis our own] for the removal of the monuments and the choosing of their replacements,ā according to the organizationās website.
Facing death threats and other acts of intimidation, such activists should be considered modern-day heroes worthy of more than a page in the history books. Itās past time we made room in public spaces for people who actually deserve our respect. The removal of Confederate monuments from public spaces isnāt about erasing history; itās about honoring the people who make it.
This story was produced by the Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education, in partnership with The Root.
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