Number 42 - His legacy lives on

Discussion in 'Sports and Athletes' started by Tyroc, Apr 17, 2016.

  1. Tyroc

    Tyroc Deactivated Account

    Joined:
    Sep 5, 2015
    Messages:
    1,032
    Daps Received:
    2,161
    Gender:
    Male
    Location:
    Brooklyn, NY
    Breaking Barriers By Honoring the Legacy of My Father, Jackie Robinson
    04/15/2016 09:41 am ET | Updated 1 day ago

    A man whose legacy I'm glad to see remembered and actively honored.
    I'm not big on heroes but I count number 42, the great Jackie Robinson as one of the few for his amazing ability to break barriers and overcome all obstacles in his way during a time when it really meant something to our people.
    There are not many who could have endured what this great man had and come through and on top like he did.
    Seeing his name and principles passed on and through his daughter who is well into her 2nd career that is a natural evolutionary step from his career shows what a great impact and influence he must imparted her with.
    image.jpeg image.gif image.jpeg

    Sharon Robinson
    Educational consultant for Major League Baseball

    On Monday, July 11, fans at Petco Park in San Diego — the site of the 2016 MLB All-Star Game — will cheer on Major League Baseball stars as they launch home run after home run during the 2016 T-Mobile Home Run Derby.
    Yet even before the start of this annual fan-favorite event, the crowd will also witness the celebration of a young “All-Star” who showed tremendous courage by publicly demonstrating values used by my father, Jackie Robinson, to break a personal barrier. This lucky grand prize winner was chosen out of nearly 18,000 entries in the “Breaking Barriers: In Sports, In Life” essay contest run by Major League Baseball and Scholastic, and generously supported by official MLB sponsor Church & Dwight.
    The program began in 1997. That year was the 50th anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s breaking baseball’s color barrier, and during a wonderful (yet cold) ceremony at Shea Stadium on April 15, Commissioner Emeritus Bud Selig, with my mother, Rachel, and President Bill Clinton by his side, announced that my father’s number 42 would be retired throughout the game in perpetuity.
    Following that momentous evening, my mother and I divided invitations from clubs to attend their ballpark ceremonies to honor my father’s legacy. One of my first ones was with the Seattle Mariners in the Kingdome, and I was invited to throw out the first pitch. I was so nervous entering that massive cement structure filled with cheering fans and a mob of press, and I was fearful that the ball wouldn’t reach home plate.
    Before I knew it, there was Ken Griffey, Jr. (currently a Hall of Fame electee) walking up to me with his wide grin and strong arms. We exchanged encouraging words and signed baseballs. Cameras flashed. When a reporter asked me if this was just about celebrations at ballparks, I paused. My parents were activists, I explained. My dad was deeply invested in youth, and right then I knew that this Jackie Robinson ballpark tribute had to impact the wider community. Three months later, I retired from twenty years as a nurse midwife and educator and began an amazing second career as an Educational Programming Consultant with Major League Baseball.
    Breaking Barriers is a character education and literacy program for students in grades four through nine. The program teaches that we all face barriers in our lives, even Major League players. We help students understand the importance of character and how Jackie Robinson used nine core values to overcome his barriers. The national essay contest is at the heart of the program as students apply the lessons they’ve learned to their own lives. By participating, children discover strengths in their own character that will help them overcome their personal struggles, challenges, hardships, and, yes, barriers.
    It’s hard to believe that this spring we will announce our twentieth class of essay winners. Over the years, kids have shared the full range of personal barriers, and in the process have inspired us with their resilience. Winners receive prizes that include: a trip to the Major League All-Star Game, laptop computers, a class visit from me, classroom sets of Breaking Barriers T-shirts, copies of my latest novel, The Hero Two Doors Down, and tablets for their teachers. Occasionally, the stars will align and we add a ballpark visit with players to the mix.
    Over the years, the Breaking Barriers program has reached more than 22 million children across the United States. To commemorate this twentieth anniversary, we reached out to past winners to find out the long-term impact the program has had on them. The responses had common themes of self-confidence, confidence as a writer, and hope.
    Peter is now a freshman at NYU Shanghai. He was a 2012 grand prize winner and an active Jackie Robinson Foundation (JRF) Scholar at that time. I saw Peter last month in New York when he came in for the annual JRF conference. Born on the West Bank in the Middle East, Peter’s winning essay described his family’s escape from war when he was five and his personal journey since coming to America.
    Peter now speaks multiple languages and is positioning himself to be a leader in global affairs. He wrote that the experience of winning the Breaking Barriers essay contest was inspiring, “namely in the confidence and hope in myself that the contest sparked ... the experience showed me exactly what setting my mind to something can accomplish: big things.”
    Malcolm, the 2015 Breaking Barriers grand prize winner, will be in our lives forever. He’s an avid baseball player from New Orleans as a member of that city’s MLB Urban Youth Academy. Malcolm’s poignant essay described how he’d been bullied for years because he stutters. What shined through the pain was his indomitable spirit. It was equally clear that by winning the breaking barriers contest, Malcolm’s status at school was elevated, and he has pledged to send us his report card each term. He’s also getting help including being sponsored by MLB to attend a summer camp for kids who stutter. Malcolm summed up his experience this way: “Winning the contest in 2015 has allowed me to find my voice.”
    We met Megan when she was 14 and she had 14 surgeries for a rare disorder. Her grand prize-winning essay showed incredible writing talent. Megan is also a baseball historian. She was so impressive that after spending some time with her at the 2011 World Series, Commissioner Emeritus Selig hired her as the youth reporter for MLB.com.
    Megan, who is now studying journalism at Miami University (Oxford, OH), recently described the program’s impact on her life in the following way: “It is one of the formative experiences of my life. From Breaking Barriers, I have gained the world: confidence in myself and my self-identity, memories to last a lifetime, the professional opportunities of my dreams and some of the most treasured relationships ... I could go on and on.”
    I also could go on and on sharing stories from the lives of hundreds of children we’ve met through the Breaking Barriers program. Over the last five years, I’ve faced my own barriers—the most tragic being the day my 35-year-old son had a fatal heart attack. The loss was indescribable. Then, I met Raymond (one of the grand prize winners in 2014). He was a shy fifth grader who’d survived repeated brain surgeries and I find myself thinking, Wouldn’t my father be proud.
    For the past twenty years, I’ve shared my dad’s story with children, emphasizing his strength of character. As a children’s book author, I’ve been able to expand my reach and inspire another generation with lessons I’ve learned from him. This work is powerful and I feel grateful.
    My father once said, “A life is not important except for the impact it has on other lives.” This is the way he lived his life, on and off the field. His legacy in baseball and beyond reflects the power of this statement. From the bold display of the number 42 across Major League Baseball clubs, Jackie Robinson Day, the Jackie Robinson Foundation, and Breaking Barriers: In Sports, In Life, Jackie Robinson is a living legacy.
     
    mojoreece and grownman dapped this.
  2. grownman

    The 100 Daps Club Supporter

    Joined:
    Oct 26, 2015
    Messages:
    935
    Daps Received:
    1,201
    Gender:
    Male
    Location:
    fl
    Orientation:
    Gay
    Dating:
    Not looking
    This is one of many inspirational posts that you have created over the last couple of days. Very needed. Thanks. Thank you to the Jackie Robinson Foundation. I squandered away many good opportunities
    because of foolishness-glad to see these students overcome.

    upload_2016-4-17_15-33-38.png
     
    #2 grownman, Apr 17, 2016
    Last edited: Apr 17, 2016
    Tyroc and mojoreece dapped this.
  3. grownman

    The 100 Daps Club Supporter

    Joined:
    Oct 26, 2015
    Messages:
    935
    Daps Received:
    1,201
    Gender:
    Male
    Location:
    fl
    Orientation:
    Gay
    Dating:
    Not looking
Loading...
Similar Threads - Number legacy lives Forum Date
Racism by the Numbers: How the Internal Revenue Service Targets Poor Black Taxpayers Race, Religion, Science and Politics Apr 14, 2019
Puzzling number of men tied to Ferguson protests have died Race, Religion, Science and Politics Mar 17, 2019
Why Did/Would You Give Him Your Number? Group Discussions May 3, 2017
The Number's First Gay Couple Group Discussions Nov 20, 2016
Number 1s Group Discussions Dec 7, 2015

Share This Page

Loading...