By Mike Greife,
January 21, 2016
PHOTO: Spring 2015 recipients of the MLK Freedom Scholarships, with Cynthia Johnson,
center, are, left to right, Matthew Martinez, Lindsay King, Katie Kim, Kaitlin Austin,
Elexus Edwards and Aimee Ekstrom
WARRENSBURG, MO 鈥 Cynthia Johnson brought her message home Tuesday evening as the
keynote speaker for the annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Freedom Scholarship Dinner
in the Elliott Union ballroom. The event is the highlight of the university鈥檚 annual
celebration of the legacy of Dr. King.
Johnson, a Warrensburg native and UCM alumna, shared with an audience of nearly 300
the story of her own challenges as she make the transition from a minority child with
a stutter to a veteran educator, administrator, consultant and lecturer with a doctoral
degree. Using music, photographs and a dramatic reading, she interwove her story with
the stories of Dr. King, the desegregation of the Little Rock schools, the arrest
of Rosa Parks, and the social changes over the past decades.
Johnson began with a monologue presentation from the play In White America by Martin
Duberman, the intense first-person account of a young black woman鈥檚 first day at the
desegretated Central High School in Little Rock. Johnson then detailed how her own
parents, the late Jerome and Shirley Johnson, were not allowed to attend high school
in Warrensburg, but instead were bussed to the all-black Hubbard High School in Sedalia.
She detailed her own education in Warrensburg, where her severe stuttering often labeled
her as unable to succeed in school. However, she noted that 鈥渆quality and education
mattered to my family.
鈥淚n kindergarten, I began to hear for the first time what I couldn鈥檛 do,鈥 she said.
鈥淚 was even told I鈥檇 never make it through school.鈥 However, she credits her parents
and her grandparents, the late Robert and Beatrice Collins, with teaching her that
she could succeed with hard work, determination, hope and faith.
鈥淧overty does not mean the inability to succeed鈥攊t means a family doesn鈥檛 have money,鈥
she said, noting that her family at one point was unable to pay for utilities. 鈥淲e
were poor, but my family gave me hope, and I had a dream. I wanted to go somewhere
and give back to someone else.鈥
For Johnson, a turning point in her education was when junior high speech teacher
Ken Bell handed her a monologue he had chosen for her to perform.
鈥淚 told him I couldn鈥檛,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut he believed I could, and I did. He took a
little girl who couldn鈥檛 speak so anyone could understand her, and he believed in
me.鈥 She then shared that the monologue Bell gave her to perform as a seventh grade
students was the same selection she had used to open the program that evening.
Johnson graduated from Warrensburg High and received her bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees
in education from UCM. She earned her doctoral degree from Baker University in 2003.
Johnson outlined many of the highlights of her journey, including the opportunity
to meet the original Little Rock Nine, the first nine black students to attend Central
High School in Little Rock in 1958.
Johnson noted that her mother, a lifelong resident of Warrensburg had attended every
Freedom Scholarship Dinner from the first in 1994 until her death in 2013.
鈥淢y mother always said, 鈥楳aybe someday they鈥檒l ask you to come and speak at that dinner,鈥
鈥 Johnson said. 鈥淚 told her that probably wouldn鈥檛 happen, but here I stand, three
years to the day after her passing, speaking to you now.鈥
Quoting Dr. King鈥檚 dream that there would one day be a world where his children would
not be judged by the color of their skin, Johnson left the audience with two principles,
challenging the audience to continue their efforts to educate every child in their
care, 鈥渂uilding a bridge from despair to hope.鈥
鈥淔irst, train a child up to the way he should go, and he will not depart from it when
he is older,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd second, it is easier to build strong children than repair
a broken man,鈥 she said, quoting Fredrick Douglass. 鈥淧overty is not an excuse to educate
children ineffectively. My experiences here in Warrensburg equipped me to deal with
people in every walk of life. Warrensburg, be sure that all children have opportunity.鈥
Following Johnson鈥檚 presentation, the six UCM students who were awarded the Freedom
Scholarships in May 2015 were honored. They were: Mathew Martinez, an economics and
political science major from Warrensburg; Aimee Ekstrom, an anthropology major from
Lake of the Ozarks; Elexus Edwards, a criminal justice major from Kansas City; Kaitlyn
Austin, a studio art major from Harrisonville; Katie Kim, an international studies
major from Kansas City; and Lindsay King, a graphic technologies major from Warrensburg.