ΊΪΑΟΙη ODI highlights βliving historyβ with groundbreaking Danville mayor

A crowd of students and community members gathered Monday at ΊΪΑΟΙη to hear J.H. Atkins speak, but his first words were not his own.
Atkins opened the βFireside Chat: Standing on the Shoulders of Othersβ program with βI Too,β a poem by Langston Hughes. The poem closes with the line, βI, too, am America.β
In honor of Black History Month, ΊΪΑΟΙηβs Office of Diversity and Inclusion chose to focus on βliving history,β or trailblazers who are shaping the history books right now.
Enter Atkins, a former ΊΪΑΟΙη staff member, and the first Black mayor of Danville, Kentucky.

Jessica Chisley β04, assistant director for diversity and inclusion student programming at ΊΪΑΟΙη, moderated the event. She said Atkins asked if he could introduce himself in a unique way β and the Hughesβ poem did just that.
βIt was exactly the type of vibe we hoped to establish for the evening,β Chisley said.
Atkins and Chisley sat in armchairs on the Weisiger Theatre stage at the Norton Center for the Arts with a fireplace between them. The goal for the evening was warmth β like sitting in a living room, Chisley said.
The pair worked through a slideshow of Atkinsβ history β from high school to his time as assistant vice president for diversity at ΊΪΑΟΙη. His conversation with students and community in attendance weaved through his story in four stages: segregation, integration, resegregation and disintegration.
βIβve lived through (all of) those historical contexts in this country,β Atkins said.
The message, however, remained the same: itβs through content of character and perseverance that Atkins built his life of leadership.
βYou introduced me as the first Black mayor of the city of Danville,β Atkins told Chisley. βWell, thatβs great. I am a Black man. Iβm also a highly qualified, highly skilled, highly trained male who is now the mayor of Danville, who happens to be Black. I was the first male teacher for many students. The first Black teacher for lots of people. And the first Black principal in the Danville school system after integration.β
Speaking to the crowd, he added: βEverywhere you young people go, anything you want to do β youβve got to take those credentials with you.β
Chisley said the program title, βStanding on the Shoulders of Othersβ paid tribute to those who walked with Atkins and βinspired, supported, affirmed, challenged and uplifted him along the way.β

In the final Q&A portion of the program, Atkins took questions from the audience β and reminded the crowd that during times of trial and struggle, perseverance and a connection to those who came before matter.
βIf you try and fail, you should always get back up,β Atkins said. βIf we allow individual moments to stop us completely, it will change the trajectory of where weβre going β¦ Iβve had moments of disappointment. But Iβm from a generation where we donβt stop, we keep on going. I stand on the shoulders of those who fought and gave their lives so I can stand on this stage and so you can be where you are today, so it should never be taken lightly.β