The Gleaner North America. February Special Edition

THE MONTHLY GLEANER | FEBRUARY 20 - MARCH 22, 2023 | www.jamaica-gleaner.com | NEWS 6 BLACK HISTORY&REGGAE MONTH Union of Jamaican Alumni Associations (USA), Inc. Over 32 Years of Commitment, Dedication and Service info@ujaausa.org 347-927-3606 .ujaausa.org * Aabuthnott Gallimore AA * Alpha Academy AA TriState Chapter * American Foundation for the University of the West Indies * American Foundation GC Foster AA * Anchovy HS AA International Chapter *ArdenneAA*BethanyPSA*BethlehemTeachersCollege AA*BeulahAA*CalabarAAofNY Inc. *CamperdownPSA*CampionCollegeAANE*ClarendonCollegeAA*CornwallCollegeOBA *DinthillTechnicalHighSchoolAA*EasternHanoverAA *EdwinAllenHighSchoolAA*ExcelsiorAA *Friendsof CharlemontHS Inc. *Friendsof PortMaria*GlenmuirAA*GodferyStewartHighSchool AA *HerbertMorrisonTechnicalHighSchoolAA*HolyChildhoodHighSchoolAA* ImmaculateConception High School AA * Jamaica Civic andCultural Associationof Rockland * Jamaica CollegeOBA * JoseMarti AANY*KingstonCollegeOBA*KingstonTechnicalHighSchoolAA*KnockalvaInternationalAAInc. *KnoxAssociationofPastStudentsNewYorkChapter *LimeHallPrimaryAA*ManchesterHighSchoolAA*Manning'sPSANY*MeadowbrookHighSchool AA*MerlGroveHighSchoolPSA*MicoOldStudentsAssocNYChapter*MontegoBayHighSchoolAA– NY*MorantBayHighSchoolAA*NewDaySchoolAA*NortheastAlumni&FriendsofGSHSInc. *OleFarmersAssocofNA*PikePSA*RosemountAA*Rusea'sOldStudentsAssoc*St.Andrew TechnicalHighSchoolAA*St.CatherineHighSchoolAA*St. ElizabethTechnicalHighSchoolAA *St.George'sCollegeOBAof theNE*St.Hilda'sAA*St.Hugh'sAA*St. JagoPSAUSA*ShortwoodPSA *TitchfieldPSSportsAssociationInc. *TivoliGardensHSAlumniTrackCorp*TrueTributeOrg FoundationInc. *UniversityTechnologyAA*WestwoodOGA*Wolmer'sAA*YorkCastleAANY Chapter*YorkStreetPSA Looking for Caribbean Chef for Boston restaurant Hours will vary and pay is negotiable CHEF NEEDED Contact: 617-759-3866 617-594-3426 WASHINGTON, DC: A trai lblazing Jamaican nurse-turned-politician is the latest person celebrated with her name on a University of Maryland (UM) School of Nursing building, amid acclaim from university and Maryland state officials as a phenomenal graduate of the school. Shirley Nathan-Pulliam was honoured at a ribbon-cutting ceremony held in Baltimore on Monday, January 30, under the theme ‘Seeds of Change’. The recognition for Nathan-Pulliam’s work includes her name being put on the newest multi-million dollar wing to the nursing school. The first Jamaicaborn person to attend the UM School of Nursing, Nathan-Pulliam did the honours, cutting the ribbon to formally open the new facility. The university also celebrated another alumna, Esther McCready, the first black woman to attend the nursing school. President of the University of Maryland Dr Bruce Jarrell lauded Nathan-Pulliam for her outstanding work in healthcare. He further announced that, in recognition of her selfless contribution and public service, she will be awarded a University of Maryland honorary doctorate in public health. The conferring of the honorary doctorate will coincide with NathanPulliam’s 84th birthday in May. Declaring herself “a champion for the poor, the underserved and the needy”, Nathan-Pulliam said in her acceptance remarks, with her children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren also present: “This is a tremendous honour and I am glad that I am alive to see it.” INCREDIBLE LEGACY UM School of Nursing dean Dr Jane Kirshling explained that the school where Nathan-Pulliam got her start was honouring the work she and Esther McCready had done – work that will impact future nursing students as well. “It’s really an important part of our history to recognise these two phenomenal alumni [who] both opened doors to generations of nurses of colour to be able to enter the profession, and to make a difference in the lives of the people that they care for.” Kirshling told the gathering at Monday’s ceremony at the School of Nursing that she wanted other nursing students to know their single actions can be just as impactful if they, too, stayed persistent.“Their actions can make a difference similar to action Shirley Nathan-Pulliam has taken,” said Kirshling. “So, continue to push for equality, continue to push for health equity issues, just stay in the present moment to advocate on behalf of all people of Maryland.” Of the two honourees, Dr. Kirshling noted “their bold actions, fortitude, perseverance, and their abiding commitment to equity and justice”. She said the objective of the University of Maryland’s School of Nursing expansion was to remember the past while honouring the future. Nathan-Pulliam was also cited as the first Jamaica-born and first Caribbean person to ascend to the Maryland General Assembly in its more than 300-year history. “When we think of her incredible legacy, her journey from Jamaica to Baltimore working in hospitals across the state and the work she has done in the state senate and the impact he has had, I think it is often easy to forget just how forward-thinking Shirley Nathan Pulliam was from the moment she set foot in public office over a 30-year period,”offered president of the Maryland State Senate, William Ferguson, in his tribute. “This woman impacted and changed hundreds of lives by promulgating healthcare bills and others,” the state senate leader continued. “On the behalf of the Senate of Maryland, I just want to sincerely say thank you for living a life of service, a life of purpose that we can all live to emulate every day.” CHAMPION FOR HEALTH AND EQUITY Meanwhile, Speaker of the Maryland House of Delegates Adrienne Jones described Shirley Nathan-Pulliam as a trailblazer and outstanding voice in Annapolis, the Maryland state capital city, “and an advocate for her community. She has been the champion for health and equity and for women. In her first year in office, she secured $2.6 million for a breast cancer diagnosis and treatment centre for low income women. “She sponsored so many healthcare bills that last year we named one in her honour. Shirley is a model for people in public service and I cannot think of a more deserving person to have their name on the University of Maryland School of Nursing building than Shirley Nathan-Pulliam.” A large contingent of Jamaicans in Maryland joined in witnessing the inauguration of the new School of Nursing wing. Born in Sherwood, in the parish of Trelawny, Jamaica, Nathan-Pulliam grew up in Kingston, where she attended Mico Teachers’ College (now The Mico University College). She later migrated to Britain and became a nurse before migrating to the United States, distinguishing herself in the field of healthcare. She then turned to representational politics in the state of Maryland in 1994. A Democratic member of the Maryland House of Delegates, she represented District 10, Baltimore County, from January 1995 to January 2015. In 2014, she was elected to the Senate of Maryland. Shirley Nathan-Pulliamhas also been an active member of the Jamaican and Caribbean diaspora communities, notably in Maryland. University of Maryland celebrates Jamaican nurse-turned-politician Former Maryland senator, Shirley Nathan-Pulliam is flanked by, from left: Taryn Faulkner and Brianna Faulkner (granddaughters), Sharon Pulliam (daughter) Zoey Lee Faulkner (great granddaughter), Wayne Pulliam (son), and Wanda Bell. They were celebrating her after the University of Maryland School of Nursing opened a new wing bearing her name, on Monday, January 30. Retired Maryland senator, Shirley Nathan-Pulliam, cuts the ribbon declaring open the University of Maryland School of Nursing’s multimillion dollar new wing bearing her name. She is assisted by the Dean of the School of Nursing, Dr. Jane Kirshling. Beside Dr. Kirshling is Speaker of the Maryland House of Delegates Adrienne Jones. Nathan-Pulliam is joined by university officials, state and local Baltimore leaders on hand to witness the inauguration of the new School of Nursing wing. The ceremony was held at the University’s Baltimore campus on Monday, January 30. PHOTOS BY DERRICK SCOTT

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTUzNTI=