Hugh
Price was the seventh leader (from 1994 through 2002) of the National
Urban League, the civil rights organization founded in 1910 to help
African American migrants assimilate into urban life, to provide
opportunities for urban migrants, and to eliminate segregation in our
nation. Price, an attorney, activist, writer, and foundation
executive was well-suited for that work, for which he may be best
known, but Urban League work is only part of his legacy. Price is
scheduled to share his reflective autobiography This African-American Life: A Memoir (Blair, 2017) during the National Urban League convention that
begins July 26 in St. Louis. I’m sure that many of his
colleagues will enjoy his reflections, much as I did when I read his
book.
In
his inspirational book, Price weaves his thoughts about public policy
with an accounting of his amazing life. His is a life that he might
not have imagined - he came of age at a time when African Americans
had access to new possibilities after rigid educational and
occupational segregation. So what young man, a product of
segregation, would have imagined himself navigating influential and
integrated waters, and making a profound difference. Throughout this
book, you get a sense that Hugh Price, though well grounded, is also
amazed at the many ways our world has changed. This African American
Life reads just like Hugh Price sounds, chock full of
self-deprecating humor and tongue-in-cheek reflections. And while
Price takes African American life quite seriously, he manages to take
himself somewhat less so. Thus, even in his laid-back way, he is
able to convey the excitement he feels at certain high points in his
life, such as when he visits South Africa, or when he first, as
President of the Urban League, gets a multi-car police escort. I am
struck both by Price’s humility and by his ability to put
himself, and important issues, in context.
Hugh
Price is the product of “good stock”, middle-class Black
Washington, D.C. Reading the first few chapters of his book is like
taking a romp through African American history. Price is the
descendant of escaped enslaved people, and it is clear that he
inherited enough of their hunger for freedom to make that hunger his
own. The inventor, Lewis Latimer, is one of his ancestors, and his
pride in his legacy shines thorough in his book. Price is not
reticent probing race and skin color conflicts when he references a
white relative of Lewis Latimer, or when he talks about tensions in
his own family when his darker skinned father, a physician, pursued
his lighter-skinner mother. Skin color discrimination is still,
unfortunately, alive and well; few are as forthright in dealing with
it as Hugh Price. He deals with it, as he does with just about
everything else, with a sage equanimity. It is clear that he is
annoyed by the ignorance of skin color discrimination, but he is not
so annoyed as to produce a tirade about it. Instead, it is simply a
factor to reflect on in “this African American life”.
Hugh
Price’s book is extremely thoughtful and transparent. While he
expresses extreme joy in the high points of his life, for example
joining the Urban League as CEO, his tone is not much different as
when he experiences disappointment at missed opportunities. The
African American community has gained when Hugh Price felt he “lost”,
and agrees with his daughter Traer, when she notes that missed
opportunities opened doors to new possibilities. Thus, it is
engaging to read through his path as youth mentor, New Haven
community leader, mayoral appointee, New York Times editorial writer,
public television leader, foundation executive, then President and
CEO of the National Urban League. In his “back nine” he
has been a professor and thought leader, connected with prestigious
organizations like Princeton University and the Brookings
Institution. Candid about the ways he lobbied for and secured some
of the positions he attained, as well as the ways that some
opportunities “fell in his lap”; his transparent
revelations should be “must” reading for young people
with aspirations. Without lecturing, Hugh Price makes powerful
statements about the importance of relationships.
Hugh
Price has been passionate, improving possibilities for young people
through his career. As a young law student and paid mentor to New
Haven youth, he learned the importance of consistency. There is no
place, he learned, for drive-by mentoring that takes place only at a
mentor’s convenience. This is a lesson for the present; so
many well-intentioned helpers feel that they can alter the course of
a life with well-meaning, but tenuous engagement. Price used his
early lessons to develop programs to combat Black youth unemployment,
both through the Rockefeller Foundation and through the military.
His commitment to youth continued in his Urban League years with his
work on quality education and the achievement gap. He describes his
work as “Spreading the Gospel of Achievement” in a
chapter of his book; it is a gospel he continues to spread.
While
I enjoy Price’s policy conversations, I equally enjoy the way
he recounts his love of family, and the early struggles that he and
wife Marilyn faced as they raised their family while he completed law
school. Equally enjoyable is his conversation about baseball, a
sport he is passionate about. Reading this book made me want to
engage Hugh Price is a rambling interview that dug even deeper into
his work than the book does. It makes me want to further explore his
love for baseball and the ways baseball metaphors reflect
contemporary life. For sure, Price hit a home run with this book,
but it makes me want to engage him in another inning, another game,
and more reflections from this phenomenal man!
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