Feminine Friday

Feminine Friday: The Grimke Sisters

President Obama came to visit Charlotte this week to speak about many topics, including gender equality in the workplace.  One of my favorite parts of his speech was:

In terms of your daughters, look, you’ve got to remind your daughters that things aren’t always perfectly fair, but people who are determined can make them fair.  So the way things get better is by that next generation taking ownership and being inspired, and seeing their mom working a tough shift and then going out there and still rabble-rousing.  Ultimately, at some point, you guys are going to be in charge.  And so we want to not send a message to them that somehow they’re limited.  We want to tell them what I tell Malia and Sasha, which is, there’s nothing you can’t do.

And he’s right.  It’s up to us to change the story.  This reminded me so much of the Grimke sisters.  Sarah and Angelina Grimke were born the daughters of a wealthy slave owner in high society Charleston.  They were both vehemently opposed to slavery and started teaching the slaves to read and write behind the backs of their family.  Then when they were older, they both decided to leave the safety of their homes and move up North to speak out against slavery.  They were some of the first female abolitionists and suffragists and became prolific speakers of the movement.

After I learned about their story from the Invention of Wings (a mostly true account of their lives), all I could think to myself was my god is that terrifying.  To leave everything you have, every safety net and iota of comfort, to fight for something you believe in.  How terribly brave they were to break away against everything they’ve ever been told to do because they knew in their heart that they were meant to be something better.  It just made me think about how it seems like nowadays we are all so scared to take any big chances or risks at all even though this world is actually really not nearly as scary as we all seem to think it is.  These women didn’t even have the option of having a job because women weren’t really allowed to have jobs, but they still jumped head first into an unknown abyss.  We owe it to them and to us and to future little girls to stop being so scared of taking risks and to start pushing for what it is we really want.

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Image of Sarah and Angelina via

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This is the Grimke house in Charleston, which you better believe I will be stopping by next time I’m in town.

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  1. Kat Faux

    Great post

  2. marilyn

    good post.
    dad

  3. Stephanie

    Great! I would love to see the house too!

  4. Jenn

    Today’s world can be so difficult to fail in–not only is there the public presentation you give in your every day life, but now we have our own social media images of ourselves that we have to manage and manicure. I feel like as women there is more pressure than ever to be great at everything — the perfect coworker, hostess, daughter, wife, mother, interior designer, cook…. You name it, so many women seem to be good at everything. That’s why I like it when I read about real women who messed their lives up in many people’s opinion doing what they believed in. You think the parents of the Grimke sisters were happy? Their friends? They faced a ton if criticism just like real women do every day and the proof is here we are talking about them because they did something real not just something expected. It’s ok to be vulnerable and controversial and not liked by everybody. Just try to be your best self, but you’ll never live up to everyone’s expectations (or your own) if you expect perfection!

    • Colleen

      So well said Jenn. Thank you!

  5. Marilyn

    great book and great article.