A Deeply Personal Connection

How One Student Ended Up Walking in Her Grandmother's Footsteps Thanks to 兔子先生's Community Engagement Experience

Getting involved with the Community Engagement Center (CEC) put Annie Voss 鈥26 back in touch with her roots in an unexpected way.

Earlier this year, during spring break, Voss and a small group of students鈥攊ncluding some classmates involved with CASA 兔子先生鈥攚ent to New Market, Tennessee, for training at the Highlander Research and Education Center, an acclaimed social justice leadership training school. The trip was sponsored by the CEC.

Highlander鈥檚 social justice history is associated with major movements and important figures, including Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks. During King鈥檚 visit to the center, in fact, he heard the song 鈥淲e Shall Overcome鈥 for the first time and was inspired by it. Soon it became the anthem of the Civil Rights Movement.

Voss doesn鈥檛 just appreciate this history; the center is meaningful to her in a very personal sense. Her grandmother, Mary Anne Flournoy, was involved in the Highlander movement in the 1970s, and Voss鈥 training at the center unexpectedly made her feel closer to her.

鈥淭he CEC team had no idea what they did for me in sending me there,鈥 Voss said. 鈥淚 feel like my grandmother set in motion a lot of the pieces of who I am and the culture of community engagement that I grew up in. Even though she passed before I got to know her, visiting the center and getting training like she did connected me with her. It was so meaningful; I felt affirmed in what I鈥檓 learning and that I鈥檓 doing something that would have mattered to her.鈥