Marcia Wilson Brown Brings Doo-Wop, Black Power, and Social Justice to Newark
By R.L. Witter
Marcia Wilson Brown is vice chancellor for External Relations and Governmental Affairs, a position in which she forges and maintains relationships on behalf of Rutgers Universityā Newark with public officials, governmental agencies, and civic groups. āI donāt find myself that interesting,ā she chuckled at the onset of our interview. Her quiet demeanor and daily devotionals belie the heart of a rebel and an activist beating in her breast. Before her days in Newark she had a whole, other lifeāone that informs her commitment to community and education to this day.
The story of Marcia Wilson Brown began in Inkster, Michigan. Both Brown and the town share the same claim to fame: it was the home of the popular Motown group The Marvelettes. āThey used to practice in my house,ā she said unaffectedly. āGladys (Horton of The Marvelettes) and my brother went to school together and my brother was in a doo-wop group. Everyone was into doo-wop.ā Another famous face around Inkster was Malcolm X. Malcolm lived there with his brother and worked at a Ford plant in Wayne. He even mentioned the town in a speech just days before his assassination.
After leaving Inkster to obtain her college degree, Brown and her husband moved to Wyoming and Chicago before heading east. When asked how she met her husband her reply began, āWhen I was a bodyguard for Angela Davisā¦ā Yes, THAT Angela Davis. Brown was active in āThe Movement,ā particularly with the Black Panthers, where she gained a reputation as a radical. There was also a stint at a Wyoming radio station where Brown discussed the cattle report with her co-star, āRodeo Round-Up Dan.ā Yet she doesnāt think of herself as interesting, huh?
Brown and her family settled in Newark in1975, where she raised her only child, a lovely daughter. As a member of An Organization for American Revolution, she traveled the country extensively working with diverse groups of people. Sheās been at Rutgers-Newark for over twenty years. āIāve met so many people across different spectrums and one of the hallmarks of my life is whether itās been the political arena, elected politics, community activism, organizing on the ground, the corporate arena, or my work at HUD, I have been given a well-rounded, cross-sector background,ā she reflected.
After earning her juris doctorate, Brown clerked for New Jersey Supreme Court Chief Justice Robert Wilentz, and has continued to advocate for social justice, equal rights, and civil rights. For years, she taught a seminar on social justice and health disparities, which gives her a certain insight and perspective on the COVID-19 pandemic. āThe actual institutions can acknowledge that disparities exist, but they donāt know how to heal it because they are so invested in the systemic authoritarianism. And the people who might know better canāt change things for themselves because they see themselves as victims,ā she said. āThis pandemic has exhausted the continuation of the old paradigms. No one can function the way they did before and this is why weāre seeing so much tension and disintegration. We havenāt let go of the old way of doing things so we can embrace the new.ā She continued, āNow that 70 percent of the people come into emergency rooms with no jobs, they have no insurance. So we have to think about how we change the construct to deal with it. Either weāre going to service people the way they are, in the space where theyāre living, or weāre going to continue doing what weāre doingā¦ Itās a strategy that requires a lot of thought.ā
Another area Brown says needs adjustment is education. āWe donāt educate our students. We give them knowledge, tell them to memorize it, and then regurgitate it back,ā she explained. āI always say weāve gone from the age of so-called reasonāthe pre-eminence of science and technology and enlightenment, to the age of ignorance. At a time when we have more technology than ever before, all of the practical problems like safe and affordable housing, poverty, and climate change, thereās a plethora of ways in which the world can become a better place, but you canāt change peopleās minds and you certainly canāt change their hearts.ā Never one to give up, Brown writes and shares daily devotionals in an effort to keep the faith.
Having worked in and around the Sharpe James and Cory Booker administrations, Brown is now working with the current, Baraka administration. āThere has never been a better time for Newark to fulfill its potential than now, and I believe thatās primarily because of the Ras Baraka administration,ā she remarked. āHe is a visionary. I think Ras coming at this time when the struggle for democracy has become even more tense due to the pandemic and the realization we are rapidly becoming a country of the rich and the poorāyou need someone to come in and say, āThis is what we have been doing and experiencing, but now weāre on a new trajectory; weāre going to look forward.āā Brown quoted Mayor Barakaās saying, āforward ever, backward never!ā and added, āHe wants to get people grounded in what could be.ā
Brown is impressed by Mayor Ras Baraka and his ideas for Newarkās future. āHeās not just a personality. He is coming up with ideas and programs that ensure people take ownership of the vision and are invested in its success. From day one, his vision has been āwe/usā and said āI am not the one who is going to make this happen alone. All of us have a part in making it happen.āā