Brothers: standing for Ketanji Brown Jackson is standing for much more
Ketanji Brown Jackson, nominee to be the first Black woman as a U.S. Supreme Court Justice. (Tom Williams/Pool via AP, File)

Coming out of the Greater Houston area, Harris County Attorney Christian Menefee has sent a letter signed by nearly 300 Black attorneys licensed to practice in Texas in support of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation to the Supreme Court of the United States, and urging the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary to make it happen.

Menefee and his contingent of bi-partisan lawyers said what so many other organizations and individuals have said, that Jackson’s credentials are impeccable, and her experience as a lawyer and judge beyond reproach What they didn’t say, but Mos Def could have, is that Jackson has more qualifications than the last two confirmed justices combined.

But Menefee said something else that’s worth noting while lauding Jackson.

“State bars across this country are filled with brilliant Black women who have won important cases, served honorably as judges, and shattered glass ceilings.”

Those words serve as a reminder that Jackson’s confirmation is so much bigger than just Jackson’s confirmation. This sister represents so much more.

When I ponder Jackson and where she stands at the intersection of history and right now, I see clearly that she represents those “4 Little Girls” (Addie May Collins, Carol Denise McNair, Cynthia Wesley and Carole Rosamond Robertson) who were murdered on Sept. 15, 1963 via the bombing of Birmingham’s 16th Street Baptist Church. The justice those angels and their families deserved has yet to visit them. Having a Supreme Court Justice literally created in their image, is a huge move in the right direction.

But Jackson represents my own “4 Little Girls,” even though they aren’t so little anymore.

My oldest child, MarQuita a recent member of the 30-plus club, has already established herself as an exceptional K-12 teacher, model, media entrepreneur and mother of three. Bria (26) is a new mom, with an old soul which is one reason why she’s absolutely adored by her clients as a senior care professional. How she does that while being a full-time college student and a full-time mom is beyond me. I guess she gets it from her mama, like our two youngest daughters, Maisha (20) and Anana (18), both college students.

This fantastic four are as gifted and talented as they are unique, creative, caring and deserving of a society that doesn’t conspire to underpay and undervalue all they bring to the table… like some GOP members are trying to play Ketanji.

Jackson embodies the beauty and strength of not only my daughters, but of multiple generations of Black women and girls. She represents our mothers and aunties, and the courageous and creative brilliance they have always displayed, even while society somehow, purposefully and otherwise, attempted to white-out, ignore and overlook them. Even while society tried and continues to attempt to bit their rhymes, surgically engineer their looks and appropriate (steal) their fire and call it their own.

Jackson carries the torch passed by Shirley Chisholm, Barbara Jordan, Daisy Bates, Ella Baker, Queen Mother Moore, Betty Shabazz, Coretta Scott King, Yaa Asantewaa, Queen Nzinga and so many more. Her presence alone as a legal force amid a system that has too long legally forced and enforced oppressive measures upon our people, is a declaration of Black fight, Black power and Black self-determination.

And because we are an African people unbound by Western hang-ups about sexuality, it’s okay for us to acknowledge that Jackson also represents all the sexiness of Black women. Because what’s sexier than a soul sister being all she was created to be, displaying her brilliance, savvy, compassion and fight, unapologetically?

The Black lawyers out of Texas who said with their chests that they strongly support Jackson’s confirmation, joined and have been joined by countless individuals and organizations too many to count. But as a Black man, I am making a special plea to my brothers.

If you haven’t already, add your name and your voice to those declaring support for Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson and calling for her confirmation. Brothers, bruhs, as individuals or as members of organizations, let’s not be silent on this. If you’re in a frat, urban garden group, pastor a church, run a business, frequent a barber shop, or gather anywhere that we gather, let’s shout to the mountaintops our support for our sister, our cousin, our daughter, our auntie, our big mama, our Queen Tiye, our Supreme Court Justice, Ketanji Brown Jackson.

I'm originally from Cincinnati. I'm a husband and father to six children. I'm an associate pastor for the Shrine of Black Madonna (Houston). I am a lecturer (adjunct professor) in the University of Houston...