Living Black History-- It's All About The Doors

Mabel  Fairbanks, who held open the door-by Tracy B AnnLiving Black History, meaning, in the here and now. I want to write about some African Americans I very much admire who are alive today. I’ll start with skating because I’m from MI and in Michigan everyone skated when I was growing up. At least everyone who was white.My favorite skater of all time is not white though, she’s black. Surya Bonaly. She was my hero for years and the judges hated her. Why didn't the judges like her? They gave a lot of reasons; her outfits, the tights she didn't wear, her lack of grace. It always seemed to me though, that her outfits were fine, her background as a gymnast didn't make her less graceful, rather it made her able to perform the jumps that were becoming increasingly, absurdly, more difficult (SNL did a great skit about this during those years.) The fact that she didn't wear tights? Yeah, I don't think so. I don't think it was the lack of tights on her legs that bothered them so much as it was the lack of the color white on the skin of those legs.Despite that, Surya Bonaly was the 1991 World Jr. Champion, a three-time World silver medalist, a five-time European champion, and a nine-time French national champion. The first woman to ever attempt the quadruple toe loop. She nailed it ...in practice, but never in competition, which didn’t stop her from attempting it again and again and again, not just in practice but in competition. You can watch her never give up here.Surya Bonaly is also the only skater, let me repeat that, the only skater, black, white, male or female, to land a back flip on one foot. Ever. A move that disqualified her from the 1998 Olympics. Which is total nonsense. The rule about certain jumps is that they have to be landed on one foot. I hate to sound jaded but this jump wasn’t allowed because Surya Bonaly was and still is, the only person in the world able to do it and Surya Bonaly was and still is, black. I'd be willing to bet that if a white person could land this jump on one foot it would be allowed.Watch her performance here in the 1998 Olympics:I love the way that once she knows she’s lost for sure, that attitude that so many of the press called “defiant”, that attitude that I share and admire so much, kicks in and she does a back flip right in front of the judges and nails the landing, on one foot. She ends her performance with her back to the judges and an elegant flip of her hand saying, oh so gracefully...well, you be the judge of the message she is conveying with that elegant black hand.Surya Bonaly did go on become a professional skater and the last time I heard she was still landing back flips on one foot at age 41.ESPN did a special on her Rebel on Ice.That’s not where it began though. It began with Mabel Fairbanks, a female African American Figure Skater. When she started in 1938 she could only skate outside in Harlem, indoor rinks were white only. When she could skate inside she couldn’t practice when the general public was skating because of, well, black legs.She couldn’t compete or be in any shows so she started her own. She eventually became a coach. Mabel Fairbanks was inducted in the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 1997. She was the first African American to receive that honor. Read about her, I beg you, I cry when I do.So it started with Mabel Fairbanks who held the door open for Debi Thomas. Debi Thomas was the first African American to win the US National Figure Skating Championships and she did it twice. She is the only African American to ever win a medal in the Olympics in figure skating. (The 1988 Winter Olympic Games Calgary, Canada.) Oh, and while she was doing this? She was also attending Stanford studying to become an orthopedic surgeon. Which she did.Together these bold women opened the door for Richard Ewell, Tai Babilonia and my favorite skater in the world, Surya Bonaly. It's all about the doors.I have always thought that my purpose in life was to hold a door open for someone. Not in a self negating type of way, I thought what I was doing was important; kind of, sort of, maybe. I didn't realize how important until I met Dr. Fergie Reid Jr. Through him I learned about his dad, Dr. William Ferguson Reid Sr., wow, what trail blazer he was. As a doctor he opened the racial doors of many facilities; military and civilian.It could be said that as a politician, Dr. Reid Sr., the first African American elected to the VA legislature, opened the door to elect the first black Governor in the US; Doug Wilder, which in turn opened the door to elect the first black President of the United States, Barack Obama.Dr. Reid Sr. is still doing it with his voter registration initiative 90for90, holding doors open for more people to vote. It's all about the doors and maybe holding a door open is not a kind of, sort of, maybe important thing. I think what I've learned is that holding a door open is a pretty big damn thing!