By Amaani Lyle
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6, 2015 – An annual presidential proclamation
and Department of Defense memorandum urges the services to highlight the
contributions and sacrifices of black soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines and
Coast Guardsmen in recognition of African American History Month.
Clarence Johnson, director of the Office of Diversity
Management and Equal Opportunity, reflected on current and past positive
impacts of integration and its necessity in maintaining an edge as an
organization nationally and abroad.
DoD Leads in Diversity
“The Department of Defense has led the nation in
assimilating diversity into our workforce,” Johnson said in a Dod News
interview. “African Americans have played heavily in the diversity and the
mission landscape for the DoD.”
In line with this year’s theme, “A Century of Black Life,
History and Culture,” Johnson recounted DoD’s diversity milestones throughout
the decades.
From President Harry S. Truman’s executive order integrating
the services, to removing barriers for civilians and later opening doors to
disabled employees, women in service and repealing “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell” to
grant rights to the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender community, Johnson
described the evolution of the department’s diversity as a force multiplier.
Johnson noted that African Americans over the last 100 years
have not only contributed to military history, but to national history.
“I see America as a big piece of tapestry, where we all …
contribute to that tapestry and certainly black life, history and culture is
important,” Johnson said.
Military icons such as Crispus Attucks, the first black to
die in the Revolutionary War, to the Buffalo Soldiers in World War I and World
War II, the Tuskegee Airmen in World War II, and Navy Adm. Michelle Howard, the
first black woman to achieve the rank of four stars, reflect beacons of hope
and resilience in the face of adversity.
“Diversity … gives us a strategic advantage and the
opportunity to have everybody participate in decision making and readiness,”
Johnson said.
But diversity, Johnson emphasized, extends beyond race and
gender.
“We can use the talents and skills sets of all our folks
because … diversity not only improves the productivity of the individual,” he
said, but also of the team and overall organization. “There’s a war for talent
out there and [it] doesn’t know any race or gender, it’s inherent in all
populations.”
Military Offers Opportunities to Learn and Lead
Johnson shared his personal experience as a schoolteacher in
Mississippi before joining the Air Force as a second lieutenant. Despite myriad
opportunities extended to him from outside the Air Force, he said, he opted to
remain a blue-suiter due to the service’s team concept and many opportunities
to learn, improve and lead.
With 40 years of military and civil service, ascension to
colonel and now leading in a critical senior executive service role, Johnson
credits his physics teacher and late father for presenting moral and character
attributes into his life and propelling him to achieve.
“The military provides you the opportunity to get leadership
responsibility fast,” Johnson said. “Nowhere in America will you be able to
lead and manage resources as fast as in the military.”
Follow the Office of Diversity Management and Equal
Opportunity Office on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram @ODMEO to learn more
about observance events and diversity across the total force.
No comments:
Post a Comment