From the
Internet:
Maggie Kuhn:
founder of Gray Panthers
- Author's name omitted by
request
- Copyright 2001 by PageWise,
Inc.
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- Margaret Eliza Kuhn was born on
August 31, 1905 in Buffalo, New York to Minnie and Samuel Kuhn.
She preferred to be called "Maggie" instead of Margaret. In 1933,
at the age of sixteen, she graduated from West High School in
Cleveland. She attended Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
Commenting on her education, she said, "In those days higher
education for women was still in its adolescence. We were given
two career options - nursing and teaching - and it was expected
that any career would be interrupted early on for marriage. I
majored in English literature with minor studies in sociology and
French." In her sophomore year she joined Gamma Delta Tau
sorority. In 1926, she graduated from Western Reserve with honors.
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- In 1930, she became head of the
Professional Department of business girls at the Young Women's
Christian Association (YWCA) in the Germantown section of
Philadelphia. She believed in the Y's philosophy, "One of the
things I valued most about the Y was its belief in the ability of
groups to empower the individual and to change society. Social
workers back then called it 'group work.' The idea was that
individuals find purpose and meaning through group association."
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- In 1941, the beginning of World War
II, she became a program coordinator and editor for the YWCA's USO
division. Kuhn commented that, "The common view today is that
women's liberation benefited from World War II. Hired by defense
industries to build aircraft and guns, women found a new freedom
and earning power."
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- After the YWCA's USO division was
phased out in 1948, she became program coordinator for the General
Alliance for Unitarian and Other Liberal Christian Women in
Boston, Massachusetts. In 1950, in order to take care of her
ailing parents, she accepted a job near them in Philadelphia as
assistant secretary of the Social Education and Action Department
at the Presbyterian Church's national headquarters. She recalled
that, "At the YWCA I had worked to bring better working
conditions, education and enrichment to working-class women. In
the social action department, my co-workers and I urged
churchgoers to take progressive stands on important social issues:
desegregation, urban housing, McCarthyism, the Cold War, nuclear
arms. We believed that without powerful institutions like the
Presbyterian Church advocating reform, many problems would go
unsolved."
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- In 1964, she took a sabbatical from
her job at the Presbyterian Church and taught a course on ethics
and poverty at San Francisco Seminary in Marin County. In 1969,
she became a program executive for the Presbyterian Church's
Council on Church and Race, and was a member of a subcommittee
that dealt with the problems of the elderly. She was interested in
the issues facing the elderly. She said, "Since the 1961 White
House Conference on Aging, which I attended as a Church observer,
I had developed an interest in problems of the aged."
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- When Kuhn reached retirement age,
she was distressed because she did not want to stop working. She
said, "I had never given retirement much thought. My sixty-fifth
birthday was in August, but I had hoped the Church would ask me to
stay on in my job on a year-to-year basis
As I felt energetic
enough to go on for many years, the idea of retiring struck me as
ludicrous and depressing."
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- In 1970, at the age of 65, she met
with a group of five of her friends to address the problems of
retirees. The group that grew out of this meeting was named the
Consultation of Older and Younger Adults for Social Change. After
a year, this organization had 100 members. The group was later
named the Gray Panthers in 1972. In 1973, eleven chapters of the
Gray Panthers were opened. In 1975, the Gray Panthers held its
first national convention in Chicago. The Gray Panthers quickly
received public notoriety and grew as a national organization. In
1990, the Gray Panthers public policy office opened in Washington,
D.C. Kuhn described the mission of the Gray Panthers, "In the
tradition of the women's liberation movement, the common mission
of all the Gray Panther groups was consciousness-raising. Instead
of sexism, we were discovering 'ageism'&emdash;the segregation,
stereotyping, and stigmatizing of people on the basis of age."
Over the years, the Gray Panthers have been involved in grassroots
activities that deal with public and governmental policies that
deal with the elderly.
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- Maggie Kuhn died in 1995. Before
her death she wrote an autobiography entitled, The Life and
Times of Maggie Kuhn. She had never married and was able to be
involved in many activities that helped make significant changes
in the welfare of the elderly. Speaking about never being married,
she said, "Many people ask why I never married. My glib response
is always 'Sheer luck!' When I look back on my life, I see so many
things I could not have done if I had been tied to a husband and
children."
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- Maggie Kuhn, the Gray Panthers
charismatic leader, changed the face of society with regard to the
elderly. She was a committed, hard-working woman who at age 65
began an organization that continues her tradition of fighting for
a better life for all. Her advice for those who want to make a
change in the world is, "Go to the people at the top - that is my
advice to anyone who wants to change the system, any system. Don't
moan and groan with like-minded souls. Don't write letters or
place a few phone calls and then sit back and wait. Leave safety
behind. Put your body on the line. Stand before the people you
fear and speak your mind - even if your voice shakes. When you
least expect it, someone may actually listen to what you have to
say. Well-aimed slingshots can topple giants."
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- Here are some more quotations
from Maggie:
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- Old age is an excellent time for
outrage. My goal is to say or do at least one outrageous thing
every week.
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- By the year 2020, the year of
perfect vision, the old will outnumber the young.
- Few people know how to be old.
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- Learning and sex until rigor
mortis.
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- Old age is not a disease - it is
strength and survivorship, triumph over all kinds of vicissitudes
and disappointments, trials and illnesses.
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- The ultimate indignity is to be
given a bedpan by a stranger who calls you by your first name.
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- Power should not be concentrated in
the hands of so few, and powerlessness in the hands of so
many.
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- There must be a goal at every stage
of life! There must be a goal!
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- Men and women approaching
retirement age should be recycled for public service work, and
their companies should foot the bill. We can no longer afford to
scrap-pile people.
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- Maggie Kuhn
- --By Utne Reader
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- Maggie Kuhn was an 89 year-old
political activist. She was the creator and founder of the Gray
Panthers, a national network to support the rights of older
Americans; bringing the young and the old together to work towards
social change, she revolutionized the way we see aging. Her books
include You Can't Be Human Alone, Let's Get Out There
and Do Something About Injustice and Maggie Kuhn on
Aging.
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