Mavis Rudof was just 13 when she realized what she wanted to do with her life.聽
It was June 11, 2019, and she watched from the courtroom gallery as her public-defender father argued for the freedom of Darrell Jones, a Black man who had been convicted of murder by an all-white jury in 1986. When the jury, this time with two Black jurors, came back with a , she knew.
鈥淚 got into the car with my dad after the verdict ... and was like 鈥榯his is the work I need to do,鈥欌 she recalls.聽
I met Mavis when she was a student in my preschool classroom. When I caught up with her a year ago, cellphone footage of George Floyd鈥檚 death had just emerged and Mavis could no longer wait to add her voice to calls for racial justice. She joined protests and solidified her resolve to 鈥渙bstruct the injustice that we are living in right now,鈥 as she told me at the time.
A year later, former police officer Derek Chauvin has been convicted of Mr. Floyd鈥檚 murder. In Mavis鈥 view, 鈥渢remendous change鈥 is still needed. 鈥淥ur first police officers were slave patrols,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat says a lot about how our systems have been built.鈥
At a societal level, she says the verdict opened 鈥渁 window of possibility for changes. It showed that convictions can happen.鈥
These hopes have been buoyed by the public discussions of justice, privilege, and racial equity over the past year. 鈥淲hite people need to be forced to think about these issues,鈥 she argues. 鈥淏lack people live it every day.鈥澛
Her advice to white people wanting to better understand these issues? 鈥淟isten to people of color. And learn. ... If race is hard to talk about, then you are probably having the right kind of conversations.鈥