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100 Black Men Of Long Beach, CA
100 Black Men of America Founder: "Become a Mentor"
William H. Hayling, a renowned African-American obstetrician and
founder of 100 Black Men of America, was only 14 when his father died
of pneumonia. Such a profound loss would send many adolescents into a
self-destructive spiral of grief and anger, but Hayling was more
fortunate than most. “I had a very supportive mother and several family
friends,” the 82-year-old physician told the audience at Boston
University’s Commencement day Baccalaureate Service Sunday at Marsh
Chapel. “They became my mentors.”
Hayling, who attributes his
success to these early role models, urged the crowd to “help another
human being who needs some guidance,” by becoming a mentor. “Remember,”
he said, “the greatness of an institution is judged not by its library
or endowment, but by the contributions of the men and women who go
forth from it, the services they render to others, and the humility in
which they serve.”
During his 55-year career, Hayling has
treated thousands of women and delivered more than 8,000 babies, but he
is most proud of his leadership role as a teen mentor. “My true passion
is helping young people grow into productive and compassionate
leaders,” he said, “particularly those who have had poor or absent male
role models in their lives.”
As is tradition, the Baccalaureate
Service opened with an organ and brass ensemble, followed by a greeting
and prayer led by Reverend Robert Allan Hill, the dean of Marsh Chapel.
University Provost David Campbell read from the Wisdom of Solomon, and
President Robert Brown read from the Gospel of Matthew.
Hill then introduced Hayling, describing him as a man “whose vocation to healing reached out to meet the needs of others.”
Hayling
began his address by reminiscing about 1943 — the year he entered
Boston University as a 17-year-old premed student. A gifted athlete, he
soon found himself dedicating too much time to the varsity basketball
team and too little time to his studies — until he received a stern
letter from a family friend and physician. “He asked if I was planning
to become a basketball player or a doctor,” he recalled. “So I dropped
basketball to concentrate solely on my premed subjects.”
Hayling
graduated at age 23 from the Howard University College of Medicine and
accepted a residency at Harlem Hospital in New York City. He later
served as a battlefield surgeon with a MASH unit during the Korean War,
earning a Bronze Star. From 1957 until 1981, he was chief of ambulatory
obstetrics and gynecology at Martin Luther King, Jr., Hospital in Los
Angeles, and from 1981 until 1998, he was a faculty member at the
Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science.
But
Hayling is best known for his work outside of medicine. Following the
example set by the role models from his youth, Hayling cofounded 100 Black Men of America, Inc.,
a mentoring program for young African-Americans and other minorities,
in 1963. Other founding members included baseball legend Jackie
Robinson and David Dinkins, who later became mayor of New York City.
The organization has more than 100 chapters and 10,000 members. Hayling
also volunteers with Mentoring Today for Tomorrow, an after-school program for young people ages 9 through 18, in California’s Riverside County.
Concluding
his address, Hayling told Baccalaureate celebrants that education is
the most important weapon they can use to change the world. “You will
make errors in some of your decisions in life,” Hayling said, “but you
must never err in your purpose or resolve. Even if you never achieve
your ideals, always be in the pursuit of excellence.”
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