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"We be sisters. We be the same, coming from the same place, going through." The powerful poetry of Lucille Clifton opens this profound exploration of sisterhood, collective power, and remembrance during Women's History Month.
What happens when women recognize their shared journey and lock arms together? The answer transforms families, communities, and nations. With women comprising 55% of Florence's population and 52% of America's citizens, we hold numerical strength that becomes transformative when united around common purpose.
This journey through Women's History Month celebrates the "Queens of the Grove" at Savannah Grove Baptist Church—women like Miss Gladys Jackson, the entrepreneur and mother of prosperous Black farmers, and First Ladies who led with grace and wisdom. These local heroines shared space with national icons like Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, who rose from nearby Maysville, South Carolina, to advise presidents and befriend Eleanor Roosevelt. Dr. Iola Jones, whose memorial plaque now stands in Florence, brought these world-changers directly to segregated schools, showing children possibilities beyond their immediate circumstances.
The most urgent message emerges when examining today's challenges: our children are struggling with reading fundamentals while parents substitute screens for bedtime stories. The greatest disservice we do to future generations is failing to teach them their history—for as the wisdom goes, "If I do not know from which I have come, it is extremely hard to develop directions to where I want or need to go."
As we face increasingly complex challenges, remember these words: "When you rock is the only time I can rock." Our strength has always been in our unity. Let God's word light your path, then go forth and let your light shine brightly wherever you find yourself. The time for sisterhood is now.