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Black HistoryCultureLifestyle

Meet Syvila Weatherford: Black Professional Profile

by Leilani Fu’Qua 10/23/2021
written by Leilani Fu’Qua

One of college student’s biggest concerns is the ability to find a job in their field after graduation. These students fail to realize the freedom that comes with education, and the ability to redirect life at any moment. Syvila Weatherford is a testament to a life of change. She has been a computer engineer, patent lawyer, author, as well as a community leader. Weatherford, who received her education from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Southern California, recalls her experience navigating higher education and her career as a Black woman. 

Weatherford’s first year at MIT commenced with massive culture shock. Due to recent Affirmative Action policies, her class of fifty Black students was considered large at the time. She says the administration was supportive of Black students, yet the campus lacked outlets for cultural expression. By the end of Weatherford’s undergraduate experience, those 50 students formed a Black Student Union that provided a community space, safe from friction and prejudice from white students. They protested for time on MIT’s campus radio station, and fundraised to bring Black speakers to campus. Weatherford’s experience in MIT’s BSU and Black studies courses shaped her in many ways. She says, “When my parents put me on the plane, I left with straightened hair, curls, capris, and a pink top. When I came home that first Christmas I had an afro, a dashiki and sandals, and I even carried a cane with me like traditional African leaders. My father said, “Where’s MY daughter?” 

After MIT, Weatherford moved back to Los Angeles and took up a job with Hughes Aircraft in Culver City where she started working on satellites. Hughes gave Weatherford a fellowship to study engineering at USC. Despite both campuses being predominantly white, she says USC and MIT were two different worlds. USC’s culture was less pro-Black, the students were not trying to ‘make waves,’  and there was no cohort of Black student representatives. After graduation, Weatherford became the Vice President for USC’s Black Alumni Association. 

She received her degree in patent law from Western State School of Law. Weatherford describes law school as “an unforgiving lover; it does not want to see you with anyone else.” She says law school completely rerouted her years of formulaic thinking and reoriented her mind to think like an attorney. With her new credentials as a patent attorney, Weatherford practiced patent law for aerospace engineers and the federal government for 10 years. 

This year, Weatherford published her first book, Blessings from the Four Winds, a Western romance novel inspired by her great grandfather’s life. Weatherford says, “I had no plans to be an author,” but was inspired by a family trip to Oklahoma in 1985, where her father began sharing stories about his grandfather who participated in the Oklahoma Land Run of 1889. She started writing outlines for chapters and jotting down ideas in the 1990’s, but didn’t start writing and editing until March 2020, when the coronavirus lockdown occurred. Weatherford says she felt extremely connected to her ancestral lineage during the books’ creation, and felt that her writing came from a place of ancestral connection and guidance. It is this special sentiment that permeates through the novel and makes each chapter so personal and thrilling. 

Weatherford encourages Black undergrads to be problem solvers and continue being thoughtful, both academically and socially. She says her experience taught her the importance of having fun, and hopes Black students find the balance between work and play. From engineer to lawyer to author, Weatherford exemplifies independence and excellence. 

Visit her website to learn more about herself and her book, Blessings from the Four Winds. 

10/23/2021 0 comments
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John A. Powell Presents the UCLA Bunche Center’s 25th Thurgood Marshall Lecture

by 04/07/2014
written by

Screen Shot 2014-04-04 at 8.54.48 AM

Photo courtesy: AdonaStudio

On April 1, the UCLA Bunche Center held its 25th Thurgood Marshall Lecture on Law and Human Rights to honor the first African-American Supreme Court Justice, Thurgood Marshall.

In past years, the annual event featured distinguished figures who had a substantial impact on the struggle for civil rights.  Past speakers include Elaine Brown, the former Chairwoman of the Black Panther Party, and Harry Belafonte, a prominent member of the civil rights movement.

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Photo courtesy: AdonaStudio

john a. powell, a UC Berkeley professor and the Director of the Haas Institute for a Fair and Inclusive Society, delivered the 2014 address. powell is a internationally renowned civil liberties expert who prefers for his name to be written in lowercase letters because he believes in being “part of the universe, not over it, as [capital letters] signify.” He has also greatly shaped race research and policy.

Claudia Mitchell-Kernan, the Vice Chancellor of Graduate Studies at UCLA and co-founder of the lecture series, stressed that despite the momentous gains we have obtained since the passage of the Civil Rights Act, “The dark past is not fully behind us.”

Speaking to an audience of nearly 80 people, powell seconded her assessment as he discussed the current state of race in America. He asked, “How do we make sense of a Black president, but an administration that does not want to talk about race?”

The widespread notion of “color-blindness” has contributed to a lack of discussion on the intersection of disparities and race. According to powell, pressing issues such as homelessness and mass incarceration not only disproportionately affect Afrikan-Americans, but also interfere with the exercise of citizenship rights; however, these concerns rarely garner national attention.

Professor powell also spoke about how the present concept of race stems from the 17th century. Whiteness was defined as “not black” and Blacks were deemed the “infinite other”. Hence, our country was built on the idea of a White benchmark. As the demographics of America shift, this standard is becoming a relic of the past; powell thus characterized the contemporary period of “heightened racial anxiety” as a product of a movement toward increased multiculturalism and diversity.

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Photo courtesy: AdonaStudio

Such angst is causing Whites to vote in terms of race and not self-interest; this is demonstrated through their fervent objections to government programs due to misconceptions that nonwhites are the primary beneficiaries—despite the fact that Whites constitute nearly 70% of welfare recipients. “It’s not that they hate public housing, they hate who is in them,” stated the keynote speaker.

The idea of a “post-racial” society simply is not viable for countless reasons, many of which include lingering racial prejudices and inequalities. As powell asserted, “We need a new language where we talk about race.”

04/07/2014 0 comments
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