To mark the 100-year anniversary of Black History Month, NationSwell hosted a virtual Leader Roundtable on February 26 designed to center Black history and Black leadership and the ways they shape our pursuit of a more equitable future.

Together, participants reflected on the quiet power embedded in everyday acts of resistance: the courage to attempt what feels daunting, the resolve to persevere through challenges, and the determination to assert agency in an increasingly polarized context. Collectively, the group’s reflections reinforced a shared point: preserving Black history — and the leaders, mentors, colleagues, and community leaders who comprise it — is preserving history itself.

A few of the most salient takeaways from the discussion appear below:


Redefine and reclaim power in all its dimensions. Power is not one dimensional, nor is it embodied solely in one person. It is communal, moral, economic, political, spiritual, and cultural. Understanding power expands how we build and wield it. 

Honor quiet power as transformational. Not all acts of power result in visible systems change. Sometimes power looks like someone seeing themselves as capable of something which was otherwise unimaginable. Quiet power is sparking agency and resistance in your day-to-day life. These moments may not make headlines, but they fundamentally reshape our reality and futures.

Recognize that community is the architecture of power. From HBCU legacies to generations of inventors, educators, organizers, and creatives, Black innovation has always been collective and cross-sector. Power is layered, shared, and sustained through the institutions, movements, and cultural ecosystems we create.

Reject erasure by telling the full story. The attack on Black history is not simply about removing dates or names from memories; it is about shaping moral narratives. In order to preserve history, we must underscore the importance of storytelling as an act of power. As the African proverb reminds us, “Until the lions have their own historians, the history of the hunt will always glorify the hunter.”

Harness creativity as a tool for preservation and progress. Reducing harm requires creative intervention and innovation. In a moment where history is threatened by distortion, the charge is to think expansively about what we can do to safeguard it. Creativity is not ornamental to justice work, it is how progress endures.

Use the principles of Sankofa to design our futures. Black history is not static commemoration, rather a blueprint. Sankofa holds us accountable to the power in remembrance; it encourages us to look back to our pasts in order to propel our futures. The courage and ingenuity of ancestors provide both instruction and mandate for curating our realities. 

Commit to courageously contributing to Black history now. The work continues amidst various threats to our democracy and freedoms. Progress has always required putting one foot in front of the other in the face of headwinds. Honoring 100 years demands not just remembrance, but renewed courage to wield power with purpose in this new era.