2008.01.20: January 20, 2008: Headlines: Figures: COS - Sierra Leone: Staff: Science: Space: African American Issues: Detroit Free Press: Jemison says Martin Luther King's dream wasn't an illusive fantasy but a call to action

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Sierra Leone: Special Report: Sierra Leone Peace Corps Medical Officer and NASA Mission Specialist Dr. Mae Jemison: February 9, 2005: Index: PCOL Exclusive: Staffer Mae Jemison : 2008.01.20: January 20, 2008: Headlines: Figures: COS - Sierra Leone: Staff: Science: Space: African American Issues: Detroit Free Press: Jemison says Martin Luther King's dream wasn't an illusive fantasy but a call to action

By Admin1 (admin) (pool-151-196-45-218.balt.east.verizon.net - 151.196.45.218) on Friday, February 15, 2008 - 7:49 am: Edit Post

Jemison says Martin Luther King's dream wasn't an illusive fantasy but a call to action

Jemison says Martin Luther King's dream wasn't an illusive fantasy but a call to action

"Too often people paint him like Santa -- smiley and inoffensive," said the African-American woman who broke the racial barrier on the space shuttle Endeavour in 1992. "But when I think of Martin Luther King, I think of attitude and audacity." Jemison said King's action on his dream made her life possible. As a little girl growing up in Chicago, she'd gaze at the stars. "I could see myself in space when others couldn't," she said. "I had to learn not to limit myself because of others' limited imagination." People were puzzled by her shared interest in the sciences, arts and community service. As a free and equal human being, she felt she shouldn't have to choose between them. Astronaut Mae Jemison, the first Afro-American woman in space, served as a Peace Corps Medical Officer in Sierra Leone.

Jemison says Martin Luther King's dream wasn't an illusive fantasy but a call to action

Stargazer turned astronaut credits the MLK dream

January 20, 2008

By DESIREE COOPER

FREE PRESS COLUMNIST

According to Webster's Dictionary, a dream is a "series of thoughts, images or emotions occurring during sleep." Nowadays, when we speak of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream of equality, it seems like one of those gauzy images that have little to do with our waking life.

But King's dream wasn't an illusive fantasy to Dr. Mae Jemison. It was a call to action.

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"Too often people paint him like Santa -- smiley and inoffensive," said the African-American woman who broke the racial barrier on the space shuttle Endeavour in 1992.

"But when I think of Martin Luther King, I think of attitude and audacity."

Jemison said King's action on his dream made her life possible.

As a little girl growing up in Chicago, she'd gaze at the stars. "I could see myself in space when others couldn't," she said. "I had to learn not to limit myself because of others' limited imagination."

People were puzzled by her shared interest in the sciences, arts and community service. As a free and equal human being, she felt she shouldn't have to choose between them.

At 16, she entered Stanford and majored in both chemical engineering and African-American studies, all the while cultivating her talents in dance. After earning her medical degree at Cornell University, she became a doctor in Los Angeles, but also spent more than two years as a Peace Corps physician in Sierra Leone and Liberia.

She joined NASA in 1987, and became the first woman of color into space. But she never let that achievement overshadow the other dimensions of her personality. Among the things she carried into space were a poster from the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and a Bundu statue from Sierra Leone.

"For me, they were symbols of human creativity," the Houston resident said recently during a standing-room only celebration of the slain civil rights leader sponsored by Northwest Airlines in Minneapolis. "The same kind of human creativity that launched the space shuttle."

Since she retired from the space program in 1993, Jemison's career has continued to defy categorization. She runs two medical technology companies dedicated to applying science to improve human life. She tirelessly promotes science literacy for children.

Her autobiography, "Find Where the Wind Goes," is aimed at young adults to inspire them to honor their God-given creativity.

I asked Jemison what she'd say to that little Chicago girl who once imagined herself floating in space. She answered: "I'm still trying to catch up with who she intended me to be."

That's what the civil rights struggle is all about: Breaking down the barriers to human potential. Too often these days, King's vision seems to be stuck in the realm of dreams. How do we make it reality?

Jemison's answer was simple: "The best way to make dreams come true is to wake up."

Contact DESIREE COOPER at dcooper@freepress.com. Listen to her on American Public Media's "Weekend America," 2-4 p.m. Saturdays on WUOM-FM (91.7).




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Headlines: January, 2008; Staff Member Mae Jemison; Figures; Peace Corps Sierra Leone; Directory of Sierra Leone RPCVs; Messages and Announcements for Sierra Leone RPCVs; Staff; Science; Space; African American Issues





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Story Source: Detroit Free Press

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; Figures; COS - Sierra Leone; Staff; Science; Space; African American Issues

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By Destiny Kopal (207.197.112.200) on Wednesday, December 03, 2008 - 2:07 pm: Edit Post

Dear Mae Jemison,
I am Destiny Kopal from Reno, Nevada. I am 12 years old and I go to donner springs elimentry. If you are reading this I would like to tell you that we (My class)are studing you for a project on a report were someone(me) well pretend that we are reporters and a nuther person(my friend Serena Podrea)pretends that their you and we well ask each other questions that only you can give us the real answer to. So that is why the class of d3 would like to ask if you can come to our school on thursday 11,2008. Thank you for reading this. PLEASE respond:-)*


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