65 years later, many of the obstacles that stood in the way of the Tuskegee Airmen have been removed. However, today we are inundated with stories about achievement gaps, low test scores among black males and increasing dropout rates. Where has the spirit of Tuskegee gone? We cannot blame all of the recent failures on the fact that our schools are segregated and poor; the schools the Tuskegee Airmen went to were much poorer. We have excelled before and we can do so again.
Men like Pastor Bill Winston of River Forest, also a former fighter pilot, overcame the same obstacles that we now believe insurmountable. Today Pastor Winston owns a 33 acre shopping mall on Roosevelt and flies his own jet around the country. The Tuskegee Airmen and their successors should remind us that we are capable of greatness even in the midst of trying circumstances.
If we want the younger generations to surpass the accomplishments of the Tuskegee Airmen, we need to get serious about demanding progress in Chicago Public Schools. Instead of deceiving ourselves by calling little efforts big efforts and heralding every tiny improvement, we ought to demand much more out of our school system. Where is the outrage in the black community over our schools’ miserable performance? If the Hispanic community can harness the power of the local school council to oust a black principal, why can’t the black community exercise the same power and take control of black schools? It seems we are more concerned with the loss of one excellent principal in a Hispanic school than we are about the failing bureaucracies in our own schools. Although the current system definitely needs reform at the state level to give parents greater control over their children’s education, we are not even taking advantage of the power we have under the current system.
The example of the Tuskegee Airmen should encourage us to make the most of our opportunities and to not accept failure as an option. Lt. Colonel Charles Dryden, now 86 years old, reminisced about his time in flight training, saying, “we dared not fail.” His is an attitude we could certainly use more of today. Our schools may not have as much money as we would like, they may be segregated and they may not offer our students all the advantages others enjoy, but when it comes to our children we dare not fail. I applaud the Tuskegee Airmen both for their service to the country in World War II and for their shining example of achievement in the face of adversity.