Working toward just, harmonious world
This year’s National Day of Racial Healing, sponsored by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation, emphasized the importance of children growing up in supportive communities that nurture their talents and stimulate their desire to learn in school.
In a short video presentation, the foundation’s president and CEO, La June Montgomery Tabron, discussed how all children deserve to live their lives free from “racism, discrimination and bias” and that they should grow up in a “just world” where “everyone can succeed.”
In reflecting on her comments, I thought about how children view the world from their innocence and how they do not judge their peers from a racial lens unless prejudice has been taught to them. Children taught to love and respect others are open to friendships that transcend race and culture. A beautiful example is a video that went viral five years ago of two adorable toddlers — Maxwell, Black, and Finnegan, White — excitedly running toward each other on a New York City sidewalk in their neighborhood. Giggling and brimming with joy, the boys hugged, causing many to comment on the wholesomeness of their bond at such a young age. If only adults could maintain such pureness and respectability.
Enabling children to grow up in the “just world” the W. K. Kellogg Foundation envisions will always be more than a daunting challenge. In thinking about our present times, race relations have greatly improved since the Jim Crow era and the civil rights movement. Our nation is more racially and ethnically diverse than at any other period in our history, and the U.S. Census Bureau projects that people of color will comprise over 50% of our population by 2044. Pew Research Center data from 2020 revealed that only 11% of a sample size of 11,001 adults viewed this as negative.
However, more recent Pew studies are showing that many Americans feel we are regressing on racial equality. In a 2023 Pew report examining how people view Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy, 58% who believed that “efforts to ensure equality haven’t gone far enough” do not think “there will be racial equality in their lifetime.”
My final thoughts on the W. K. Kellogg Foundation’s continued theme of racial healing are that for it to happen, we must be divinely transformed, as King taught and preached. King wrote that we “become new creatures,” referencing 2 Corinthians 5:17, and “transformed nonconformists” by opening ourselves up to love all people through Christ. Through this love, we “gain the strength to fight vigorously the evils of the world in a humble and loving spirit.”