CATEGORY

The Heart and Soul of Getting Out the Vote

by Emily Gelbaum | October 31, 2012 12:00 am

During a site visit to Chicago to work with the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights (ICIRR) as part of my electoral work with the Campaign for Community Change, I had the opportunity to sit down with one of the organization’s newest organizers, Elizabeth Rodriguez. A recent college graduate, Through her personal story, Liz revealed her deep commitment to her work and the strong heart and soul of what it means to be a community organizer.

Elizabeth Rodriguez grew up in an all-female household and constantly asked herself why different people are given different privileges. In high school, she volunteered to help underprivileged people as a means of coping with the inequality that she saw and experienced every day. When she went to college, it was the first time that she had an explanation for why these things were happening, why different people had different privileges and different levels of wealth.  These lessons shaped her desire to do community level work and she grows more connected to this work every day as she works to build lasting power and increases the number of voters in her own community.

While Liz took this position with little knowledge about what “community organizing” meant, she has quickly developed a passion and love for it. She now asserts that her position as an organizer is about building relationships in her community that extend beyond Election Day and provide for sustainable community strength. These relationships include those between Liz and her own volunteer interns, one of which she recently helped apply to college. To Liz, her position is about building a culture of connectedness and “showing that there is hope” not just for the young volunteers she works with, but in her community as a whole.

Liz’s story is a reflection of the passion and strength that drive organizers around the country. I have had the good fortune to meet with many young organizers this election cycle and I am consistently astounded by their ceaseless sense of community and responsibility to do the right thing. Their enthusiasm is contagious and not only benefits their personal growth as organizers, but the communities in which they are organizing. These are emerging leaders that will work to empower their communities for the long term. I am so excited to see all that they do and the future they are working to build.

Related Articles

Hate crimes are on the rise – and black women are a target

  [caption id="attachment_10082" align="alignleft" width="300"] Nia Wilson/Daryle Allums, godfather of Nia Wilson[/caption] A recent study from the Center for the…

Called to Deeply Listen to Those Impacted by Police Violence

Hearing families who have been impacted by police violence speak is always a transformative and powerful experience for me. While…

It's a living: Surviving as a creative artist in an expensive city

Last month former Cosby Show actor Geoffrey Owens was spotted working the register at a Trader Joe’s in New Jersey.…

When scary times lead comics to progressive politics 

Comedy has become essential to survive the bizarre tenure of Trump’s presidency. Comics have riffed on everything from his tendency…

Introducing Dorian Warren as Next CCC President

"Who am I? I am just a kid from the south side of Chicago. A weird, long-suffering Cubs fan, who grew up walking picket lines with my mother, who was a public s...

Private prisons make more money the more people they keep incarcerated. In Florida, activists are working to stop the practice.

As Americans we believe deeply in freedom and fairness. We believe that we should be free to pursue the American…