NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Felix Boateng, director of the Bishop
Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Center at Vanderbilt for the past
four years, died Wednesday afternoon, April 26, at Vanderbilt University
Medical Center after a brief illness.
"Felix Boateng was
a dedicated teacher, a gifted mentor to students and an uncommonly principled,
fair and generous individual," said Provost Thomas G. Burish. "He
was unalterably dedicated to furthering diversity on campus and in the
broader community. He was understanding without compromising his values;
he could fight for equality and justice without becoming angry or inflexible;
he taught by example but always quietly, with humility. Although his
life was much too short, his legacy will be lasting and will live through
the many students, the Black Cultural Center and the University he so
loved."
Boateng set out to make
the center a home away from home at Vanderbilt for African-American
students but also developed programs aimed at helping the whole University
community better appreciate and understand cultural diversity. He saw
this as a way to help promote the retention and graduation of black
students. He often collaborated with other campus offices, including
the Opportunity Development Center, the Margaret Cuninggim Womens
Center and the Womens Studies Program.
"I believe strongly
that rather than making the students fit into the system we need to
develop programs that will wrap around the interest of the students,"
Boateng told the Vanderbilt Register in October 1996. "I
believe we should take their interests very seriously."
Among the innovations he
initiated was a series of weekly one-hour conversations with black faculty.
He also worked closely with the Association of Black Graduate Students
to develop mentoring and tutorial programs for African-American students.
Sybril Bennett, who received
her Ph. D. in education and human development last spring, was one of
the students who benefited from Boatengs help as well as that
of his wife, Ophelia, who worked for a time as a secretary at Peabody
College. "He was always there with his personal support and a kind
word. If I was ever in a bind, I knew I could count on him. That was
true of him and his wife. They gave me the extra leg up I needed."
Francene Gilmer, director
of Vanderbilts Career Center and coordinator of the Universitys
Black Graduates Recognition Ceremony, said Boateng had been an
integral part of the event since coming to Vanderbilt. "He even
arranged for us to have Kente cloths imprinted with Vanderbilt
University and the year of graduation handmade in Ghana."
This years ceremony, scheduled for May 11, is dedicated to Boateng.
"We thank Dr. Boateng
for his infectious smile, his sense of humor and his sincere dedication
to making Vanderbilt a better place for students, faculty and staff,"
the printed program says in part.
Boatengs focus on students
led to the formation of the Black Cultural Centers Student Advisory
Council, comprised of representatives from all Vanderbilt African American
student organizations. The advisory council is responsible for making
rules and regulations for the center and for advising center staff on
programming of interest to students.
Boateng, who began his career
as an award-winning high school teacher, continued teaching at Vanderbilt
with a class on teaching teachers to be effective in a pluralistic society.
He received his bachelor
of arts in history and African studies from the University of Ghana.
He received his master's degree from the University of Southern California,
Los Angeles, in international/intercultural education in 1972. He also
received a doctorate in social and philosophical foundations of education
in 1977 from USC.
Boateng began his career
in education in 1968 as a social science teacher at Lennox High School
in California where he received "The Most Outstanding Teacher of the
Year Award" following his first year of teaching.
He served as assistant
director of the Center for International/Intercultural Education at
the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, from 1972 to 1977.
He then joined Washington State University in Pullman, Wash., where
he served as assistant professor of education and black studies and
director of The Heritage House-African American Educational/Cultural
Center until 1981. He was named director of the Black Studies Program
in 1981 and was an associate professor in the Black Studies Program.
He joined the faculty of
Eastern Washington University as director of the Black Education Program
and professor of black studies and education in the fall of 1983. He
received the Black Educator of the Year Award from the Black Education
Association of Spokane in 1991. At the time of his appointment to Vanderbilt,
Boateng headed a $1 million U.S. Information Agency/U.S. Agency for
International Development Faculty Development and Exchange Program between
Eastern Washington University and the University of Cape Coast-Ghana.
Boatengs research and
scholarly writing focused on African-American studies, education in
Africa, African cultural traditions in America and cultural relevance
and diversity in the curriculum.
He served as president of
the National Council for Black Studies, Pacific Northwest Region, and
was a member of the National Board of the Council for Black Studies.
Arrangements, which are being
handled by Lewis and Wright Funeral Directors, are incomplete. In addition
to his wife, Boateng is survived by two daughters, Brenda and Michelle,
both of Nashville; his mother, Felicia Agyako Mensah of Ghana; and six
brothers and sisters.
Contact: Elizabeth
Latt, (615) 322-NEWS
elizabeth.p.latt@vanderbilt.edu
-VU-