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Sojourner’s Truth

| Jun 10, 2026

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As the United States prepares to mark the 250th anniversary of its founding later this summer, there will be extensive celebration and reflection about our democracy and the values it embodies. But the 250th is not the only anniversary that should capture our attention. Indeed, our nation’s story is an evolution of moments built over time.

One of these building blocks occurred 175 years ago, in 1851, during the Women’s Convention in Akron, Ohio. There, on May 29th, Sojourner Truth delivered a legendary speech that called on attendees to reject the racial and gender biases used to limit her place in society and to defy a status quo that devalued her as a Black woman and treated her as invisible and expendable. Her speech is worthy of reflection today because it reveals an important story about how different people experience our democracy — and that story should inform how we build a more inclusive vision for our future.

Sojourner Truth’s life defied expectations. She was born into slavery in the North and later won her freedom, becoming an acclaimed speaker, preacher, and activist. In her speech to the Women’s Convention, she challenged the audience to see her for who she really was.

Truth spoke with clarity and conviction about the architecture of oppression that conspired to diminish her. She proclaimed that her experiences, abilities, and humanity merited the same respect and dignity afforded to men and to white women. She pushed back on the infrastructure of inequity — the systemic barriers rooted in stereotypes and false narratives erected to limit her life — and argued that advancing women’s rights and autonomy required our society to tear down these barriers. And she spoke about the futility of denying progress to women and Black people, arguing that such gains would not be a threat but a reflection of collective progress.

Her words still resonate. Although our modern fights are different, many of the same underlying issues remain — entrenched biases, efforts to limit women’s roles and rights, attacks on women’s autonomy, and attempts to raise doubts on women’s abilities, especially those of Black women. We can learn much from her wisdom.

In 2026, people in power are still trying to deny opportunities to women. This includes officials in the Trump administration questioning the skills of women serving in the military, or President Trump’s repeated attacks on the qualifications of high-profile Black women. Just like Truth, we must be willing to call out inequity and discrimination and reject outdated prejudices and assumptions about women.

For too long, flaws in our democracy have excluded certain groups — like women and people of color — from full participation. We must support efforts to fill those gaps by protecting the infrastructure needed to expand civil rights for all. This work is even more important as the Trump administration has moved to dismantle longstanding safeguards and civil rights offices that were established to enforce the law.

Sojourner Truth refused to be defined by the stereotypes society tried to construct about her. We must follow her example and be vigilant in combatting false narratives and, instead, elevate women’s voices to tell their own stories. Too often, caricatures are deployed to justify unfair and unjust treatment. Policymakers defend draconian cuts to Medicaid by maligning the work ethic or honesty of low-income women, despite substantial evidence to the contrary.

Even Truth’s speech fell victim to apparent inaccuracies as it was retold over the years. The phrase most often attributed to her — “Ain’t I a Woman” — was added years later in a version produced by a white abolitionist. The wording crudely mimicked a Southern dialect and syntax attributed to a slave, even though Truth was from the North, perhaps to fit a preferred profile rather than Truth’s reality. Confronting these kinds of distortions is part of the larger work of reckoning with the contradictions at the heart of our country’s history.

The story of America is the story of our 250-year struggle to create a more perfect union. Sojourner Truth’s words, delivered 175 years ago, tell an important part of the story that too often gets overlooked — hard truths about where we have fallen short, but that offer a pathway for progress.

Sojourner Truth was clear-eyed about the strengths and weaknesses of our American democracy and fought for something better. Achieving that something better is deeply connected to our ability to learn and not run from or obscure our past. To make progress, we must be clear about who we are, who we have been, and where we need to go to forge a new direction and fight for a better future for all.

This piece originally appeared in The Fulcrum.

About the Author

Jocelyn Frye

Jocelyn Frye

Jocelyn Frye is President of the National Partnership for Women & Families. Under her leadership, the organization is focused on advancing economic justice, affordable and equitable health care, civil rights, and reproductive freedom for women who face the steepest barriers – including women of color, women with the lowest incomes, women with disabilities, and transgender women.

Prior to taking the helm of the National Partnership, Frye was a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress (CAP), one of the country's foremost progressive think tanks. In that role, she shaped policy development for CAP's Women’s Initiative across a wide range of issues – including narrowing the gender pay gap, improving women’s employment opportunities and economic stability, combating gender-based discrimination and gender-based violence, and addressing the Black maternal health crisis.

Before joining CAP, Frye served in the White House during the administration of Barack Obama. As Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of Policy and Special Projects for the First Lady, she oversaw a broad issue portfolio focused on improving the lives of women and families. She helped lead the two signature initiatives of then-First Lady Michelle Obama: tackling childhood obesity and supporting military families. She also played an important part in fostering career development opportunities for young women through the White House Leadership and Mentoring Initiative.

Frye's current tenure at the National Partnership marks her second stint with the organization. She previously acted as the National Partnership’s General Counsel, concentrating on employment and discrimination issues facing women of color and low-income women. Furthermore, she helped spearhead the organization's advocacy around judicial nominations and the Supreme Court.

Frye began her legal career at the firm of Crowell & Moring. She received her J.D. from Harvard Law School and her undergraduate degree from the University of Michigan.