Babette Hecht Rosenberg, 1924-2022

My mother passed away peacefully Thursday afternoon.

She had hoped to come to Opening Day in Annapolis with my brother Bruce, as was her custom.

Mother was my Election Day coordinator when I first ran for the House of Delegates in 1982.

Her handwritten charts of who was volunteering in each precinct are atop a book case next to the desk where I am writing this tribute to her.

Mother was also my editor. he reviewed my drafts – from high school essays and a sermon to my summaries of my first 39 legislative sessions.

More importantly, she and my father taught me some lessons.

I drove to Amherst College in Massachusetts with Jean Fugett.  Jean’s parents would bring him from their house on Mosher St. to ours on Wallis Av.

As Jean and I drove away, my parents had invited his parents into our house.

That did not often happen among white and Black families in Baltimore in the late 1960’s and early 1970’s.

I went to Amherst for two reasons: Harvard said no, and my mother went to Smith College, 20 minutes away from Amherst on Route 9.

My parents’ lessons also had an impact on my course selection at law school.

I took Sex Discrimination and the Law. The class was taught by Professor Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

My mother said that her crucial role in getting me elected was one of the highlights of her life.

Professor Ginsburg paved the way for women to take pride in what they accomplished on their own, as well as for their children.

May Mother’s memory be a blessing.

Power intoxicates and it corrupts

“Precisely because the problem is one of temperament and character, it will not get better. It will get worse, as power intoxicates Trump and those around him,” former Bush administration official Eliot Cohen wrote in The Atlantic.

President Kennedy said the same thing – almost.

“When power intoxicates, poetry restores sobriety,” read the draft of his speech for the groundbreaking of the Robert Frost Library at Amherst College in October 1963.

The President edited that sentence to read, “When power corrupts, poetry cleanses.”

How do I know?

The full text of the speech, with Kennedy’s hand-written changes to Arthur Schlesinger’s draft, was on display at the Kennedy Library in Boston. I asked Kathleen Kennedy Townsend for a copy. It now hangs on my office wall.

As a student at Amherst, I studied in the Robert Frost Library.

From Lofty to Local

      I was discussing lofty issues last week. 

     At my 40th college reunion, I moderated a panel entitled “From Malcolm to Barack.”  How had our activism been shaped by events before, during, and after our four years at Amherst?

      When I got home, there was a letter on my desk. 

      A number of violent crimes, including several murders, have been committed in one block of my district.  The community wants the liquor stores and other businesses in that block closed by 10 pm daily.

       My response: get the facts.  The police commander for the district confirms that there is a host of illegal activity at this location.  I’ve asked  committee staff in Annapolis, “What laws have been passed to address problems like this in other communities?”

        We’re scheduling a meeting among the neighborhood, the police, the City Council member, and the 41st District delegation, Senator Gladden, Delegates Carter and Oaks, and myself. 

        “If you work hard on community issues, your constituents will appreciate your hard work when deciding how to vote on controversial issues,” I told my classmates under the reunion tent.  “If you take a position they disagree with, they’ll respect you nonetheless.”     

 

Networking for jobs and votes

             I’m not going to Orioles Fantasy Camp this year.

             Instead, I spent the day at Camp Amherst College, where students are on campus but classes don’t resume until next week.

             I was on a Career Choices panel on Non-profit and Public Service.

             Networking was the buzzword among my fellow alumni.

             “In politics, networking is a little different,” I stated.  “When I ask people to help me get a job, I’m asking for their votes.” 

             “We try to create consumer excitement for new apps,” said a Media and Communications panelist.

             “That’s what advocates try to do every session,” I said to myself.  “We try to return the favor every 4th year on Election Day.”

 —  

             “Follow your desire,” I said to the students. 

             That’s what I’ve done.

  • My Key Issues:

  • Pimlico and The Preakness
  • Our Neighborhoods
  • Pre-Kindergarten
  • Lead Paint Poisoning