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Book Bans Reflect Outdated Beliefs About How Children Read

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Trisha Tucker, Associate Teaching Professor of Writing, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

Banned Books Week, an annual event that teachers and librarians across the U.S. mark with a combination of distress and defiance, occurs in September.  The theme of this year’s event, which took place Sept. 18-24:  “Books Unite Us. Censorship Divides Us.”

It comes amid regular high-profile efforts to remove allegedly controversial or inappropriate reading material from libraries and schools. Nowadays, the small groups of parents who traditionally spearhead such efforts are joined by politicians authoring legislation that would outlaw or criminalize making controversial books available to children.

I teach a class on banned books at the University of Southern California, so I’m prone to notice headlines on the topic, but this isn’t just perception bias. The American Library Association reports that in 2021, it tracked 729 challenges to library, school and university materials, targeting a total of 1,597 books. That’s the highest number of attempted book bans since tracking began more than 20 years ago. This year is on course to surpass 2021’s record with 681 challenges as of Aug. 31, 2022.

Increasingly, bans have targeted books written by or featuring LGBTQ people and people of color. But perennial classics like “To Kill a Mockingbird,” “Huckleberry Finn” and “Grapes of Wrath” also have been challenged by parents concerned about their racist language and marginalization of Black characters.

“Book banning doesn’t fit neatly into the rubrics of left and right politics,” reminds Pulitzer prize-winning author Viet Thanh Nguyen.

What unites these challenges is a professed desire to protect young readers from dangerous content. But attempts to ban books are frequently motivated by misapprehensions about how children consume and process literature.

How children read

Many adults presume that exposure to particular literary content will invariably produce particular effects.

Christian author and editor David Kopp acknowledged as much when he addressed the controversy around the 1989 children’s book “Heather Has Two Mommies.”

“[T]he deeper dilemma for many Christians who oppose this book is often not a theological one, but an emotional one. It has to do with what we fear,” he wrote on the faith-focused website BeliefNet in 2001. “We fear our kids will be indoctrinated somehow. We fear they’ll come to consider homosexuality as normal and then … the part we don’t say … become one.”

Kopp found this fear “absurd.” He insisted that a “book, well intentioned or otherwise, isn’t likely to change our child’s sexual orientation.”

Many scholars would agree. Research shows that children’s reading experiences are complex and unpredictable. As scholar Christine Jenkins explains in an article about censorship and young readers, “Readers respond to and are affected by texts in ways specific to each reader in the context of a specific time and place.”

Put simply, children co-create their own reading experiences. Their interpretation of books is informed by their personal and cultural histories, and those interpretations may change over time or when readers encounter the same stories in different contexts.

Neither the supposedly healthy nor the supposedly dangerous effects of childhood reading, then, can be taken for granted. Children are not merely empty vessels waiting to be filled by a text’s messages and images, despite how adults tend to portray young readers as helplessly in thrall to the stories they consume.Wall Street Journal contributor Meghan Cox Gurdon has argued that parents must be ever-vigilant against books that would “bulldoze coarseness [and] misery into their children’s lives.” Earlier this year, an Ohio school board vice president accused Jason Tharp, author of “It’s Okay to Be a Unicorn,” of “pushing LGBTQ ideas on our most vulnerable students.”

Who children are

Such perceptions reflect pervasive stories American society tells about children and the nature of childhood. These stories are the focus of an undergraduate class I teach called “Boys and Girls Gone Wild,” in which we explore themes of childhood innocence and deviance through texts such as “Lord of the Flies,” “When They See Us” and “The Virgin Suicides.”

On the first day, I ask students to brainstorm on common traits of children. They frequently choose words like “innocent,” “pure” and “naive” – although babysitters and students with younger siblings are more likely to acknowledge that children can also be “mischievous” and “strange.”

My students are usually surprised to learn that the Western notion of children as innocents in need of protection is a relatively recent idea, stemming from economic and social changes in the 17th century.

English philosopher John Locke’s late-17th-century idea that humans were born as “tabulae rasae,” or blank slates, had incalculable influence. The child with no innate traits must be carefully molded. Thus “childhood became a period of intense governance and control,” according to scholar Alyson Miller.

Some groups held divergent views, such as 18th- and 19th-century evangelical Christians, who believed children were born imbued with original sin. But the narrative of the inherently pure, helpless child came to shape fields as diverse as biology and political theory.

Perhaps no disciplines were influenced as powerfully as the intertwined fields of literature and education.

The value of ‘unsafe’ books

Book bans gain traction in cultures that imagine themselves as upholding a barrier between the purity of children and the corruption of the world.

A person reads in a library

The library at the University of Texas, a battleground state for books. Brandon Bell/Getty Images

But this effort can have unintended consequences, argue scholars like Kerry H. Robinson. In her 2013 book on sexuality and censorship, she writes that “the regulation of children’s access to important knowledge … has undermined their development as competent, well-informed, critical-thinking and ethical young citizens.”

Debates about challenging books would go differently if participants understood young child readers as active participants in the discovery and creation of knowledge.

Jason Reynolds, the Library of Congress’ national ambassador for young people’s literature and author of the oft-targeted “All American Boys,” which depicts a racially charged police beating, offers a different – and, I’d argue, healthier – way to conceive of children’s relationship to reading.

“There’s no better place for a young person to engage and wrestle with ideas that may or may not be their own than a book,” he told CNN for an in-depth June 2022 feature on book banning in America. “These stories are meant to be playgrounds for ideas, playgrounds for debate and discourse. Books don’t brainwash. They represent ideas.”

For Reynolds and the other authors, librarians, readers, parents and educators commemorating Banned Books Week 2022, adults have a right to disagree with those ideas. But rather than fear the uncomfortable “conversations young people bring home,” adults can actively encourage them.

“If the adults are doing their jobs,” Reynolds says, the discomfort that often accompanies growth “doesn’t have to feel like danger.” (The CONVERSATION)

Suicide Prevention Month in TN: ‘You Are Not Alone’

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Danielle Smith

September is National Suicide Prevention Awareness Month, a time to spotlight this issue in Tennessee and across the country.

Almost 1,300 Tennesseeans took their own lives in 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That’s almost 18 people per 100,000 residents – and of course, every suicide affects friends and family members as well.

Jeff Fladen, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) chapter in Tennessee, says they work to enhance the lives of those affected by mental illness. He explained that it’s important to know suicide isn’t the answer and to seek help through the suicide-prevention hotline.

“We always talk about ‘you’re not alone,'” said Fladen. “People may feel very alone if they’re depressed, or even if they’re not depressed, but they don’t see ways to end the pain or to feel better. Now, we have 988, so it’s real easy – just call 988, and you will get to talk to somebody that can help.”

The theme of this year’s awareness month is “Together for Mental Health,” focusing on the need for
more mental health resources.

Suicide is not just a growing issue in Tennessee but across the nation. The CDC reported in 2020 that nearly 46,000 people took their own lives.

Fladen said they’re working on diverse outreach efforts within the Hispanic, African American and Asian communities, to help reduce the stigma of suicide and mental health issues in those communities.

“We also support things like the National Suicide in the Black Church Conference, which takes place in Memphis, Tennessee, every two years,” said Fladen. “We have programming we offer every year that features diverse presenters. We want to help people see people that look like them.”

According to NAMI, almost 5% of adults consider suicide at some point in life. Among high school students, that increases to almost 19% – and 45% for LGBTQ young people.

Advocates Calling on Congress for Better Investment in Kids

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Advocates for children’s well-being are in Washington, D.C. today, calling on lawmakers to invest in kids.

The Save the Children advocacy summit is gathering people from around the country to speak with members of Congress. They are focusing on the Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting Program, which is a voluntary home visiting program.

Anita Davis, volunteer and outreach leader for the Save the Children Action Network in Tennessee, said she did home visiting for seven years in Metro Nashville in a low-income housing area and is well aware of the needs of families and the importance of the renewal of the program.

“This legislation will end on September 30th if Congress does not renew it,” Davis pointed out. “So we’re talking with — I’ll be speaking with — my two state senators and two of the congressional representatives from Tennessee, to urge them to please not only renew this legislation but to improve it.”

Davis noted they also are advocating for Congress to reauthorize the Farm Bill, which would include improvements to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

According to Feeding America, in Tennessee, 41.8% of households receiving SNAP benefits have children. Save the Children is urging Congress to preserve and protect SNAP benefits because so many families rely on them.

Roy Chrobocinski, managing director of federal domestic policy for Save the Children, said the rising price of goods and supply-chain issues have affected families and their ability to access food.

“We know the benefits don’t go far enough,” Chrobocinski stressed. “We know that families who receive the benefits, they still have to pay money out of pocket. It’s not covering the cost of all of their food, but it makes sure that they can supplement what they are paying to make sure that they have enough food to eat each day, each month.”

Chrobocinski added children do not donate to political campaigns, and they cannot vote, so he argued it is critical for Save the Children advocates in Washington to share their stories and make it clear to members of Congress the importance of investing in children.

Fun Facts That You May Not Know

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By Robin Smith 

Whether you have fun with trivia night or just want to expand your knowledge, enjoy a few fun facts!

Did you know that scientists are finding through reputable research that eating onions with your meal significantly reduces blood sugar? The vegetable is high in fiber, low in calories, especially those derived from carbohydrates– which turn to sugar–and contains antioxidants that boost immunity and impact the endocrine response of a meal.

Specifically, eating about 3.5 ounces of raw red onion with a meal significantly reduced blood sugar for patients with both Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes.

So, enjoy those onions with your meals, but don’t negate the positive effect by using sugared mints.

Have you ever wondered how long it takes a single drop of water to travel from the beginning of one of the longest rivers in the US, the Mississippi River, to its end?

When water reaches Tennessee on the state’s western edge heading south to the Gulf of Mexico, it has entered along numerous watersheds and tributaries. The waterway–which originates at Lake Itasca within Minnesota–winds its way along the perimeter of nine other states, is over 2,300 miles long and is named after a French translation of the Algonquin name, Misi-ziibi, or Great River.

According to the United States Park Service, it takes a drop of water about 90 days, or 3 months, to travel from the glacial lake filled from mountain ice and snow in Minnesota that forms the headwaters to the Mississippi River Delta which creates one of the largest coastal wetlands in America. 

Now you know that the crystal-clear icy water, if unobstructed, will find its way to the Cajun marshes in the heat after 12 weeks. 

Closer to home, those favorite chocolate candies, M&Ms, will likely be in many shopping carts over the next few weeks as the tricks and treats of fall festivals and Halloween are purchased.

Many don’t appreciate the fact that about half of the M&Ms are made in New Jersey at the company’s headquarters, while the other half are made in Cleveland, Tenn. Having a connection to the Volunteer State may be news to some, but who knows what the letters “M” represents?

The letters are initials of the last names of two candy creators–one from the Mars family and the other from Hershey’s Chocolate fame. Forrest Mars Sr. patented the process of creating the hard shell to prevent melting of the confection. Bruce Murrie, son of the president of Hershey’s Chocolate, partnered as the source of chocolate for the candy, which was initially sold exclusively to the US Army to give soldiers a portable treat.

Now you know. Have fun with your new trivia! 

Students Walk Out of East Ridge High School Over Arrest and Video

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Where were the parents and students when all these laws and policies regarding SRO’s, The Teacher’s Discipline ACT, etc, were being implemented by the state and HCDE? Do all Schools in the HC system have a SRO on Staff? Is there a Teacher and student guide/handbook for students, parents, and teachers regarding this matter? What and where are the afterschool and weekend programs for students and parents to utilize to address these type issues in the public school system? What does the curriculum and instruction and Professional Development look like regarding collaborative efforts to deal with the needs of these 21st century students. 

Where is the evidence-based research regarding the HC school system’s disciplinary approach that has led to the mass incarceration of students of color to prison in Hamilton County? And is it safe to assume this county’s school disciplinary approach is a direct correlation to the joblessness, homelessness, and poverty in Hamilton County, particularly in Chattanooga?

Curious minds want to know.

Audrey Ramsey

“The Talk & Tour” With My Colon!

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After watching two TV newscasters jokingly – and uncomfortably – talking about getting colonoscopies recently, I decided to resurrect a column I wrote a few years ago after getting a call from “CeCe.” Here it is, a “talk & tour” with my colon. Yes, you read that right, my colon

COLON: Terry, so glad that you finally stopped down. You’ve been neglecting me.

ME: Well, I didn’t exactly cherish the idea of visiting you of all things colon. Besides, it’s so damp and dreary here and, on top of that, it doesn’t exactly smell like a bed of roses down here. 

COLON: C’mon, this won’t be that bad, I promise. 

ME: I can’t imagine it being worse than that awful stuff I had to drink in preparation, that’s for sure. So, let’s get this thing over with.

COLON: Okay but watch your step.

Wait, hold on you’re saying. Why on Earth is this guy talking about his colon of all things? 

Well, here’s bit of advice for you (or someone dear to you); Get thou a colonoscopy. It could be lifesaving! Or, while on the topic in general, get any of the many screenings that may detect early signs of a preventable – I repeat PREVENTABLE – cancer. For, as the “the talk & tour” with my colon indicated, I did and am alive and here to tell you that it is well worth it if it provides peace of mind if the results show no signs of a problem. 

You see, I woke up from my “tour” light-headed from anesthesia and, once able to focus my groggy eyes on my wife and the doctor who performed my colonoscopy, I scanned their faces for any signs of trouble. Didn’t see any. Ah, relief. His words were music to my ears: 

 “You did well Mr. Howard. I didn’t find any polyps,” said my doctor while flashing a smile and pointing to photos of my unsightly colon. 

But there’s a backstory to my story. It’s about an unexpected call I got years back from CeCe, a classmate from college.

“Terry, other than going through a divorce and dealing with pancreatic and liver cancer, I’m doing just fine. Life has been good to me. My biggest regret is not getting tested for early signs of cancer years ago.” 

The casual matter-of-factness and humor in how CeCe uttered those words that afternoon carried through in her many emails afterwards. I hung up stunned by her disclosure about something so personal and, at her wise advice, committed to getting my long overdue examinations scheduled right away. 

But there’s even more to my story. Fast forward to a year later. I was one of a dozen folks CeCe sent her cancer updates to. Here’s how one read:

 I just completed the six-week scan review. The results were mixed, but promising. The pancreatic and several of those on the liver have been reduced. However, there is one tumor on the liver that has grown quite a bit. Of course, the doctors are making plans to attack it. One or two weeks after that, I return for another form of radiation–can’t remember the name right now. This treatment consists of three or four days of radiation. I’ll receive one dose every other day. Once the results are in, I will give you my final update. I have decided not to speak of this disease after that. As always, I thank you for your support. 

A month after that last email, CeCe passed away.

Now have I gotten your attention readers, or have I crossed the line into something too personal for your liking? How willing are you now to have “the talk & tour” with your colon, prostrate, breasts, lungs or other organs? And if you think that you’re in great health and see no need for a screening, how willing are you now to initiate “the talk” with others about getting screened?

Now I realize that I’m about to make a dangerous assumption here, but to girlfriends, wives and partners of the men in your lives, you may have to work a little harder in initiating “the talk” with them about having prostate and colon examines since many men (I once included myself in that category) are hard-headedly reluctant to do that. There’s just something about men, manhood, male pride and…okay, why don’t I just leave it right there!

And if you are a man of color (Black men are at a higher risk for prostate cancer), or in a relationship with one, a “talk & tour” could be one of the best decisions you will ever make; believe this brother.

Here’s the “tail end” (pun intended) of “my talk” with my colon:

COLON: Okay, you successfully completed your test. I’ll see you again in five years.

ME: Whew, I’m glad you didn’t find anything cancerous. Is there anything you want me to do during the meantime?

COLON: Yes, have the talk with as many as possible about getting screened.

ME: Okay, and better still, I’ll make this a focus of my next column. I just hope that many of my readers won’t be turned off by my addressing something as unsightly as a colon.

COLON: Well, get them to see it this way; a colon is unsightly only if it is ridden with fast growing polyps or cancer itself. In the absence of that, maybe it’s not so “unsightly” after all, is it?

The talk and tour? ….  well, the choice is now in your hands readers.© Terry Howard is an award-winning writer and storyteller. He is also a contributing writer with the Chattanooga News Chronicle, The American Diversity Report, The Douglas County Sentinel, Blackmarket.com, co-founder of the “26 Tiny Paint Brushes” writers’ guild, recipient of the 2019 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Leadership Award and 3rd place winner of the 2022 Georgia Press Award.

Urban League Leaders Condemn Violent School Discipline Caught on Video, Call for Immediate Intervention

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Marc Morial, President National Urban League

Candi Johnson, President | Greater Chattanooga Urban League 

NEW YORK and CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (September 2022) – National Urban League President and CEO Marc H. Morial and Urban League of Greater Chattanooga President and CEO Candy C. Johnson (last week) condemned the brutal mistreatment of an East Ridge High School student that was captured on video, and called for increased behavior intervention and cultural competency education across the district. 

“The level of violence directed at a student who posed no threat to anyone is unacceptable,” Johnson said. Appropriately-trained staff could have mitigated the situation without involving police resulting in this violent act. Instead, it appears the goal was to merely demonstrate the adults’ power and humiliate the student. The school resource officer should be also disciplined appropriately. This is not the environment we want to see in schools.” 

The incident lent urgency to the recommendations of the 2022 State of Black Chattanooga report,  which found overwhelming racial disparities in student discipline in Hamilton County Schools.   Black students in Hamilton County received out of school suspension four times more often than white students and were expelled seven times more often than white students.  The recommendations include increasing teacher diversity, providing support to retain educators of color, and expanded cultural education for all educators — interventions which could help decrease the disproportionate discipline rates of Black students and improve overall school climate.

“The video is a stark and painful illustration of the criminalization of minor disciplinary issues where Black students are concerned,” Morial said. “A child’s physical safety and developing sense of self were battered in service to the sensitive egos of adults.  That’s not just a red flag but a screaming alarm that the disciplinary system is broken and in need of a drastic overhaul.”

Both the National Urban League and the Chattanooga affiliate stand ready to work with the school district to bring much needed reform.

Chattanooga Clergy for Justice Sends Notice to Tennessee Officials Following Release of Video Showing Sro in Altercation With Student

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y Camm Ashford 
Chattanooga Clergy for Justice has notified officials after a video showing an alercation with East Ridge student Tauris Sledge and School Resource Officer (SRO) Tyler McRae was uncovered Tuesday.

The letter from the group of faith leaders, dated Sept. 21, 2022, was sent electronically to Hamilton County Sheriff Austin Garrett, Hamilton County Mayor Weston Wamp, the 

Hamilton County Board of Commissioners, Hamilton County District Attorney Coty Wamp and Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee.

It says in part, “We have heard from multiple victims about abuse at the hands of HCS (Hamilton County Sheriff’s) Officers, and now we see that Officer Tyler McRae, who has a history of accusations and lawsuits against him for participating or standing silently by as women, children, and other populations were sexually assaulted by your department’s officers, is involved in an incident of excessive force against a child. He was removed from the streets and put over the care of our children. Why was this officer ever placed as an SRO at a school?”

In Tuesday’s video–which has since gone viral on social media–SRO 

McRae is seen grabbing Sledge by the hair, and forcing him to the stairs of the school bleachers. The 18-year-old

 student was eventually taken into custody on charges of disorderly conduct, resisting arrest or obstruction of legal process, and assault. 

According to the arrest affidavit, SRO McRae and other school officials were called to the East Ridge High School gymnasium by the gym coach to assist with an “issue” he was having with Sledge Tuesday morning.
The report said Sledge had told the gym coach he wasn’t feeling well and refused to participate in kickball for class, but later played basketball during free time. When the coach confronted Sledge about being apparently well enough to play basketball, he reportedly became aggressive and loud, cursing and calling the coach racist and other names.

During an ensuing altercation, Sledge reportedly “stepped up” to SRO McRae and allegedly ignored several of McRae’s commands, including to remove his backpack so he could be handcuffed, prompting the SRO to pepper spray Sledge in the face to “gain pain compliance.”

In the video, Sledge is heard saying “I’m not resisting” several times during the altercation. 

Sheriff Garrett said in a statement, “I understand this is a sensitive issue to many in our community. Once we ensure we are in compliance with state law and have adequately removed the identity of uninvolved minors, which includes ensuring their faces are not identifiable, I intend to make this body worn camera video available to the public. The contents of the video will show the complete picture of the events that occurred that day surrounding this deputy’s use of force at East Ridge High School.”

Letter from Chattanooga Clergy for Justice:

Dear Sheriff Garrett: 

Since 2018, members of the clergy have made multiple attempts to host a meeting between community members and the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office regarding excessive use of force and hiring policies as well as conditions within Silverdale Detention Center. A representative from the Department of Justice has reached out to you and your department multiple times to mediate, with full transparency, a conversation between Chattanooga Clergy for Justice and the HCSO regarding these policies, including most recently, this summer, when both you and DA Coty Wamp responded to the DOJ request with a refusal to meet until after the election. The time has arrived.  

Since our initial request to address these issues with the department, there have been multiple deaths of incarcerated individuals at Silverdale (including one this week), we have heard from multiple victims about abuse at the hands of HCS Officers, and now we see that Officer Tyler McRae, who has a history of accusations and lawsuits against him for participating or standing silently by as women, children, and other populations were sexually assaulted by your department’s officers, is involved in an incident of excessive force against a child. He was removed from the streets and put over the care of our children. Why was this officer ever placed as an SRO at a school? No child, regardless of age, should feel unsafe in school. 

We call for: 

● Officer Tyler McRae’s immediate removal from East Ridge High School or that of any school based on this and past incidents with women and children.  

● A response by October 3, 2022, to the DOJ representative with an agreed upon date and time for a conversation mediated by the representative between you and Chattanooga Clergy for Justice regarding changes in use of force and hiring policies of HCSO, as well as, addressing feeding and medication schedules at Silverdale Detention Center.  

Once again, these are not “isolated incidents” within HCSO. Excessive use of force against Hamilton County’s citizens is often perpetuated by the same officers. How many more of these videos of brutality by deputies of the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Department do we need to see to recognize that this is systemic, that this is a pattern and practice of its officers?    

Reforms to curtail police brutality and harassment must be a collective endeavor between law enforcement, elected leaders, and the community. Change requires good faith partners, and we believe there are many good faith partners who recognize systemic racism plagues our society and that the current police methodology is inept. In order for trust to be built, and the community to trust your leadership of the HCSO, it is urgent that we meet before another woman, child, or citizen is victimized by your officers. We look forward to hearing from you by October 3.  

Signed, 

Chattanooga Clergy for Justice 

cc: (via electronic mail) 

Hamilton County Mayor Weston Wamp 

Hamilton County Board of Commissioners 

Hamilton County District Attorney Coty Wamp 

Governor of Tennessee Bill Lee 

Tennessee Tourism Outperforms the Nation with Record $24 Billion in Domestic Travel Spending in 2021

Juanita Brown Ingram is a woman of many talents as she is an award-winning attorney, filmmaker, author, fashion philanthropist, and actress.

The beautiful wife and mother, a proud HBCU graduate, Tennessee State University alum and (Did we mention Chattanooga native?) is not new to pageantry. She is the first African-American woman to compete and win the title of Mrs. Indiana United States in 2007 and has since gone on to compete and become the first African-American Ms. World International 2012, and has Mrs. Great Britain World 2011, Mrs. UK Universe 2013, and Mrs. UK International 2014 (placing Top 3 at Nationals). Ingram received her Bachelor’s Degree in Accounting from Tennessee State University and her MBA and Jurist Doctorate from the University of Memphis.  She is a US licensed attorney and a former adjunct professor of Business Law, a member of Tennessee State University alum and member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., and was the recipient of the 2021 NAACP Ruby Hurley Image Award in Chattanooga. 

She was also acknowledged as one of the Top 7 Black Women in Pageantry to turn Beauty into Business in Madame Noir.

 Ingram founded Purpose Productions Inc. in 2018, which is a women-led production company with a mission of creating content that celebrates authentic BIPOC narratives while empowering women and youth through film. On Juneteenth 2021, she launched Purpose Streaming, a streaming platform dedicated to content that inspires, informs, and empowers through BIPOC-centric content.

The newly crowned Mrs. Universe ran on the platform “dress for success,” a platform that she says she lives by and is a nod to her service work. She is the founder and current Chairman of the Board of Trustees for Dress For Success Greater London, an organization that helps disadvantaged women become economically independent by styling them and giving them interview attire, career training, and support. She recently opened a Dress For Success office in her hometown Chatanooga, Tennessee.

Her proud parents Ms. Carolyn Ivel Tinker Brown and Dr. and Mrs. Richard Brown reside in Chattanooga.

FB quotes from Mrs. Universe:  Truly honored. I went into this competition just giving God a “yes” for the purpose He had for me. I am grateful for this opportunity, very grateful.

“I think pageantry with purpose a very powerful, so to all the young ladies who are interested in doing that I say go for it,” said Ingram. “Prepare and just be your absolute best self.”

“I won! I am Mrs. Universe 2022! I’ve wanted this title for the last 10 years and here it is! 

What a blessing!   I will post more later – I have a ton of people to thank and an after party to attend right now! My family and friends have been angels!!  But for now, I just want to encourage someone to stay true to who you truly are and who God has called YOU to be. Don’t be influenced nor discouraged by anyone or anything. Hold on to YOUR standards and YOUR calling. Hold fast to your purpose and never let go!” Juanita Brown Ingram, Esq. (Compiled: CNC Editor/FREdwards)