The Montgomery County-Radford City-Floyd County Branch of the NAACP held its 45th Freedom Fund Banquet Oct. 16 online.
Some 50 members and supporters attended.
The theme, “Are You with Us?” was introduced by Branch President Deborah H. Travis. Custom Vibe, composed of Denise Smith and Alan Johnson on vocals and Glen Holmes on keyboards, led the singing of “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” and later performed the Curtis Mayfield classic “People Get Ready.”
New Life-Members were recognized: At the Gold level, Mary North; and at the Silver level: Robert Beckman, Lynn Brammer, Andrew Crane, Mary Lee Hendricks, Myrl Jones, Gunin Kiran, Simuel O. Lewis III, and the Rev. Michael Sanborn.
Executive committee member-at-large Marlin Reeves, thanked and announced the names of the sponsors of the banquet. Benefactors, at the level of $1000 were Asbury United Methodist Church, Carilion Clinic, Duncan Honda/Hyundai, Food Lion-Delhaize, Inc., Freedom First Credit Union, Schaeffer Memorial Baptist Church, Virginia Tech Office for Inclusion and
Diversity, and Virginia Tech Office of the President.
Sustainers at the $500 or $600 level were First Baptist Church of Blacksburg (Clay Street), the League of Women Voters, LewisGale Regional Health System, the Montgomery County Democratic Committee, New River Community College Office of the President; and the Town of Blacksburg.
Supporters at the $300 level were Mr. Larry Bechtel and Ms. Ann Shawhan, Dr. and Mrs. Nathaniel L. Bishop, Dr. and Mrs. William Hendricks, Dr. and Mrs. John Hess, Dr. and Mrs. Ergodan Kiran, Dr. James Klagge and the Rev. Katherine Carpenter, Ms. Molly McClintock and Ms. Irene Peterson, and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation.
The Nannie B. Hairston Community Service Award for long-time service to the NAACP and the community went to Dr. Wornie Reed. The award was presented by Karen Jones, Chair of the branch’s Political Action Committee and winner of the award in 2019.
The honoree’s civil rights and racial equity work can be seen from Alabama to Tennessee to Boston and throughout the country. The mark he has made on the New River Valley is immeasurable. As a founding member of the Dialogue on Race leading the Law Enforcement
Issue Group, Dr. Reed has been instrumental in the working relationship between our law enforcement and the community. He has been called upon to serve on multiple forums as the leading expert on policing issues. As a contributor to the Roanoke Tribune, weekly articles on issues regarding race, equity, inclusion, and politics help illuminate issues and provide clarity and understanding.
Dr. Reed is Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies at Virginia Tech and is the Director of the Race and Social Policy Research Center. His scholarly work includes books on employment discrimination, racial profiling, and health disparities among African Americans.
The father of two sons and the husband of Mildred, Reed is a Silver Life subscribing member of the local NAACP branch, has served as an Executive Committee Member-at-Large, and as advisor for the VT college chapter of NAACP. He is currently a member of the board of the ACLU-VA.
Reliford Sanders introduced the program’s keynote speaker, Dr. N.L. Bishop. In 1975, Dr. Bishop became the first African-American member of the Christiansburg Police Department and served as a police officer and criminal investigator until leaving to pursue a career in healthcare administration.
In 2010, he broke another barrier by being appointed the third president and first Black President of the Jefferson College of Health Sciences. Dr. Bishop’s most recent trailblazing role is as the inaugural Chief Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Officer of Carilion Clinic.
Speaking on the theme “Are You With Us?”, Dr. Bishop described the insurrection at the nation’s capitol last January, and recent attempts to recast this criminal event as somehow honorable or heroic. He compared this with long-standing attempts to re-imagine the corrupt ideologies that fueled slavery and the South’s role in the Civil War as somehow ones that were virtuous and even righteous and resulted in the Civil War taking on the term, “Lost Cause.”
He talked about his decades of trying to understand that term engraved in the Confederate monument on Christiansburg’s town square. From that corner as a child watching parades, later directing traffic in his role a Christiansburg police officer, and then in daily runs by this same monument, he always questioned the term. This was while also questioning what he was taught in history classes during Jim Crow segregation and the way the inhumanity of the slavery era was minimized.
He was pleased when the request to add story boards adjacent to the Confederate monument was so well supported and unanimously passed by the town council, and with the hopeful message it sends. Bishop asked his listeners to join him in celebrating the plan to add storyboards that will recount the local history of Black enslavement and subsequent liberation, cultural life, and the contributions that Blacks have made to local history, often through the work of the Christiansburg Institute. Dr. Bishop emphasized the importance of teaching honest and accurate history, even when it is painful to hear. The full story needs to be told.
In his role with Carilion Clinic, Dr. Bishop was instrumental in helping to roll out the COVID vaccine in Roanoke and the NRV. He was especially concerned to ensure that people without easy access to computers, people who were suspicious of the vaccine, and people from a variety of backgrounds had equal access and would show up to be vaccinated. In his official role as an advocate for diversity, equity and inclusion, he noted its importance not only in health care, but in business and in education as well.
In concluding, he challenged his audience to stay in the struggle and take a stand for values that create a world that is more inclusive and equitable. He closed with a favorite quote of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s: “Make a career of humanity. Commit yourself to the noble struggle for human rights. You will make a greater person of yourself, a greater nation of your country and a finer world to live in”.
The program concluded with words from President Travis, who thanked the sponsors, attendees, and organizers of the banquet, and asked once again “Are you with us?” to inspire our commitment to continuing work for civil rights and the betterment of all people in the New River Valley.
The branch usually holds its general Body meetings on the fourth Sunday of each month at 3:30 p.m. on Zoom. Everyone is welcome. For information on joining the meetings or joining the branch as a member, contact dhtravis@yahoo.com.