NFLG Chair Joe Jones plays key role at White
House Fatherhood Forum
President Barack Obama launched the
first of several Presidential Fatherhood Forums he plans to schedule
around the nation. The June 19, 2009 announcement by the President
was made during the
White House historic Father's Day celebrations.
The full transcript of the
President's Fatherhood Town Hall remarks is
here.
NFLG Chair Joe Jones (front
2nd right) and US Senator Evan Bayh (D-IN) (rear 2nd
left)were among the President's special guests at the forum in the
East Room of the White House.
Jones, who is Chief Executive Officer
of the Center for Urban
Families, serves on the
Fatherhood and Healthy Families
Taskforce of President Obama's Advisory Council on Faith-based and
Neighborhood Partnerships.
"I am honored to serve in this
capacity and hope to represent NFLG, CFUF and the fatherhood field
with all sincerity and commitment," said Jones following his
appointment.
NFLG member Carey Casey, chief
executive officer of the National Center for Fathering and author of
Championing Fathering,
serves on the Presidential Taskforce. His book, Championing
Fathering, is available on
www.fathers.com.
NFLG member Roland Warren,
MBA, President of the
National Fatherhood
Initiative, is also a member of the Fatherhood and Healthy
Families Taskforce. Warren was the first participant called on by
President Obama during the forum's Q&A.
The exchange was as follows:
THE PRESIDENT: Okay.
So what I want to do is just call on some folks. They can
ask a question. They can share a story. Organizations that
are doing great work on fatherhood, please tell us a little
bit about the work that you are doing. And I want to
especially hear from some of the young people who somehow
ended up sitting in the back. (Laughter.) I don't know how
that happened. I'm going to start with this young man right
here.
Go ahead. Introduce yourself. Stand up, please. Q Yes. My name is Roland Warren. I'm president
of an organization called National Fatherhood Initiative.
And first, just thank you for what you're doing on this
issue. And a lot of folks have been sort of toiling on this
issue for a number of years, and to have you come forward
and step up and make this a national priority is really
important.
And one of the things I just want to say to you, that your
message, in terms of the fact that even though you've had
obviously tremendous success without your dad, the fact that
you really needed him and that kids have a hole in their
souls essentially in the shape of their dad I think is
pretty important, because we really need to focus on that
issue; that we got to change the legacy and help our kids
pass on the legacy -- have our dads pass on a different
legacy than maybe they inherited.
I grew up without my dad, as well, and went to Princeton and
things of that nature, but still needed him. That's one of
the reasons I do the work that I do. So I really am
delighted that you're doing the great work that you're doing
around this issue.
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you so much. Yes, I really want
to emphasize this point about how just small moments and
gestures can make a huge difference. A lot of folks know I
love playing basketball. But it was my father who gave me my
first basketball. Even though he wasn't a part of my life,
in the few weeks that I was with him, he gave me a
basketball.
A lot of folks know I love jazz. It turns out he took me to
my first jazz concert. I didn't remember this until later on
in life, but just that imprint is powerful. And imagine if
that's sustained every day. And especially, young men, when
they hit the teenage years, to have somebody there who is
there to steady them and to provide them with some guidance,
that makes all the difference in the world.
And again, this is not to take away from the heroic work
that moms are doing. It's to emphasize moms need some help
-- because if you're a single mom like mine was, and maybe
they're going to school or working -- the pressures are
enormous. And having somebody else there who's able to carry
on that child-rearing responsibility is absolutely critical.
Joshua DuBois is Special Assistant to
the President and Executive Director of the White House Office of
Faith-based and Neighborhood Partnerships.