►
From YouTube: Inspiring Generations with Celeste Williams EP4
Description
Guest: Sharon Caulfield, Video Production by Chelsea Community TV
A
Today
I
have
in
the
studio
a
very
inspiring
woman.
I
admire
her
totally.
I
trust
her
judgment.
She's
been
a
host
on
many
programs
at
the
senior
center.
She
also
has
been
assisted
dean
of
bunker
hill
chelsea
campus
and
she
has
so
so
many
accomplishments
under
her
belt.
I
can't
begin
to
tell
you,
but
while
we
go
through
this
interview
with
my
guest,
miss
sharon.
Carfield
is
here
today
on
inspiring
generations
and
I'm
so
happy
to
have
you
with
us
today.
Thank
you
so
very.
A
B
A
A
Now
you
seniors
out
there
that's
watching
this
program.
Today,
you
probably
are
familiar
with
miss
sharon.
Carfield
she's
been
at
the
senior
center
many
times.
She
also
had
the
pleasure
of
meeting
young.
Ladies
from
the
collaborative
on
our
last
bunker
hill,
I
mean
not
bunker
hill.
Excuse
me,
you
know,
I
make
mistakes,
everybody
does
we're
only
human,
but
she
was
a
host
for
maya
angelou.
B
B
I
thought
first
of
all,
she's
very,
very
strong
black
woman.
She
was
never
afraid
of
anything.
She
had
lived,
possibly
started
kind
of
awful
life
being
moved
from
place
to
place
by
her
parents
and
then
living
with
her
grandparents
in
arkansas
being
after
being
born
in
saint
louis
missouri,
but
she
was
a
woman
of
great
talent.
Yes,
she
was
a
woman
that
really
wanted
the
world
to
see
that
diversity
is,
is
fine,
there's
nothing
wrong
with
being
a
person
of
any
race
of
color
and
she
fought
for
unity.
A
Definitely
and
that-
and
I
see
a
little
bit
of
you
as
some
you
know,
maya.
I
see
a
little
bit
of
me
as
somebody
and
I
see
so
many
other
beautiful
complexions
yeah
that
remind
me
of
maya
angelou
when
they
step
up
to
the
plate
and
they
leave
their
bias
behind
and
they
say
you
know
what
we're
all
human
and
we
all
go
through
things
in
life,
exactly
you
know,
but
we
can
overcome
it
right.
A
B
You
know
do
your
work
yeah,
but
mike
has
such
great
statements
and
one
I'd
like
to
read
right
now,
and
it
kind
of
pulls
all
of
this
together.
What
we're
saying
and
one
thing
that
she
said
is
we
all
should
know
that
diversity
makes
for
a
rich
tapestry,
and
we
must
understand
that
all
the
threads
of
the
task
tapestry
are
equal
in
value,
no
matter
what
their
color.
A
Very
very
inspiring,
if
I
had
known
about
maya
when
I
was
a
young
girl
in
elementary
school
in
brooklyn,
which
the
curriculum
didn't
allow
them
to
teach
about
certain
black
figures.
And
you
know
in
that
time
and
of
course
I
could
truly
say
that
was
the
time
of
the
civil
rights
movement.
For
me.
What
time
in
history.
B
B
A
B
B
A
B
A
See
from
you,
it
was
a
balance
growing
up
in
the
brooklyn
and
crown
heights
jewish
hasidic
neighborhood.
Yes,
interacting
with
rabbis
at
a
very
early
age.
There
was
no
barriers
for
me.
You
know
the
communications
in
that
neighborhood
was
middle
class.
A
Yes,
I
didn't
understand
a
lot
of
things
about
migrations
from
the
south
and
at
that
time
we
I
I
can
remember
like
in
72
there
was
a
great
migration
of
southerners
coming
into
new
york
and
coming
into
the
community,
and
it
was
amazing
because
I
really
didn't
know
much
about
the
south,
my
grandmother
when
she
arrived
in
new
york.
She
never
talked
any.
She
left
the
south
behind,
so
I
never
really
knew
what
went
on
there,
but
now
you're
talking
about
segregation,
that's
right
right
right,
and
how
did
you
deal
with
getting
through
that?
B
Knew
what
for
us,
the
best
thing
was
to
get
your
education
so
of
my
10
sisters
and
brothers.
Nine
of
us
finished
college,
so
we
all
went
on
to
finish
college
and
we
knew
that
after
that,
there'd
be
a
better
life
for
us.
Yes,
but
also
in
the
community.
We
had
a
strong
community,
even
though
we
were
all
black.
B
A
A
A
Family,
strong
family
values,
yes,
no
sabotaging
of
character.
A
My
grandmother
spent
a
lot
of
time.
I
lived
with
my
grandmother
as
well
growing
up
both
of
them
and
one
was
from
an
irish
descent.
Yes
and
the
other
one
was
gigi
gulla.
So
when
I
was
with
my
grandmother
from
iris
descent,
she
used
to
be
getting
dressed
to
go
to
the
lodge
a
lot.
You
know
I
didn't
know
what
that
was
about,
but
she
was
always
glamorous
and
beautiful.
A
My
gichi
gullah
grandmother
was
always
cooking,
so
I
I
learned
how
to
cook
through
her
lens,
but
she
was
a
a
hard-working
woman
and
she
taught
me
the
value
of
hard
work.
Yes,
she
always
told
me
that
hard
work
never
killed.
Nobody
and
if
you
put
your
best
foot
forward,
you
can
achieve
the
things
you
want
in
life.
Nobody
ever
told
me.
I
couldn't
do
anything
that
I
wanted
to
do.
That's
right.
A
B
Definitely
it
started
when
we
were
young.
We
were
always
encouraged
to
be
part
of
different
organizations
active
in
our
church.
I
was
in
the
methodist
a
church
growing
up,
and
you
know
what
I
never
remember
missing
church
all
right,
so
I
was
in
a
family
that
encouraged
you
to
go
to
church.
Yes,
I
was
in
a
family
that
encouraged
you
to
be
active
in
the
community.
B
A
A
B
But
he
was
a
great
lady,
his
father,
great
people,
his
sisters
and
brothers
are
great
to
me,
so
there
have
been
no
issues
there
as
far
as
race
is
concerned.
At
all,
definitely.
A
When
I
used
to
see
couples
of
blended
cultures-
yes,
I
used
to
say
they
have
to
be
strong
because
they
won't
go
through
something.
That's
right,
not
everybody's,
going
to
like
seeing
that
blend,
and
I
myself
had
to
reconcile
with
that.
I
had
a
blended
family
and
one
day
I
just
sat
down-
and
I
said,
am
I
fulfilling
dr
king's
dream
because
he
made
that
speech
when
I
was
a
very
small
girl.
A
I
was
about
eight
years
old,
seven,
eight
years
old,
and
I
couldn't
really
understand
him,
saying
that
little
white
girls
and
little
black
boys
and
little
black
girls
and
nobody
will
hold
hands
someday
and
come
together
in
unity.
That's
right!
I
didn't
understand
it
until
I
dropped
all
of
the
stereotypes.
Yes,
yes
and
and
didn't
listen
to
too
much
of
the
propaganda
right
right
that
was
going
through
our
neighborhood
exactly.
A
B
Exactly
so
celeste
for
me,
it's
like
reliving
some
of
the
things
that
happened
in
the
60s,
the
race
riots,
the
deaths
of
many
blacks,
including
martin
luther
king,
I
believe
died
in
six
years
old.
So
but
what's
been
good
for
me,
is
that
I've
had
a
strong
family
on
both
sides.
My
own
family,
my
husband's
family,
my
husband,
is
a
very
dedicated
husband
and
father.
A
B
East
boston,
high
school
yeah
and
he
was
in
boston,
possibly
13
years
wow,
but
he's
a
retired
educator,
good
father
and
a
good,
very
good
husband.
B
B
A
B
B
B
A
Discovered
you
know,
through
the
latino
lens
and
through
the
african-american
lens,
that
we
can
join
together
to
the
beat
of
that
drum.
B
B
B
A
She
was
on
the
set
of
poetic
justice.
Yes
and
tupac
was
you
know,
filming
exactly.
B
A
Know
and
after
after
she
had
a
talk
with
him,
I
think
she
had
a
profound
impact
on
him
right
right.
Definitely,
you.
A
B
B
B
B
B
A
So
strong
being
connected
is
such
a
powerful
man,
yes,
and
and
and
being
there
most
times
when
you
need
her
and
on
this
particular
day
you
know
she
was
being
celebrated
by
her
poetry
friend.
B
A
Feel
free,
but
I
truly
believe
that
it
pushed
her
even
harder
to
get
to
get
through
to
the
the
african-american
youth
in
this
country.
That's.
B
B
A
B
A
B
B
B
Exactly
and
so
let's
look
at
this
this
year-
the
port
laureate-
I
guess
you
would
call
her-
was
a
young
black
woman,
but
she
was
also
the
poet
for
clinton's
inauguration.
A
A
I
had
to
read
about
her
reading
at
clinton's.
Yes,
yes,
inauguration
right
right
right,
I
didn't
actually
see
it.
I
had.
I
had
to
go
back
and
study
that,
but
this
young
lady,
that
stepped
up
this
year
right
she
was.
B
B
A
B
That's
right,
just
like
her,
you
know
it's
never
saw
anything.
She
said
something
else
here
that
I'd
like
to
say
just
about
what
you
just
said,
and
then
it
is
hate.
It
has
caused
a
lot
of
problem
in
this
world,
but
has
not
solved
one
yet.
So
that
goes
along
with
what
you're
saying
celeste,
also
and.
B
A
B
That's
right:
retiring
from
bunker
hill
community
college.
I
had
25
years
with
buffer
hill.
I
did
amazing
many
jobs
there,
but
my
last
career
there
was
as
associate
dean
at
the
chelsea
campus.
I
had
worked
on
both
campuses,
the
charlestown
campus
and
the
chelsea
campus,
and
when
I
look
back
in
my
life,
a
mississippian
now
in
chelsea
massachusetts.
B
B
B
In
the
framingham
natick
area,
because
I
came
to
massachusetts
to
work
as
an
accountant
at
general
motors
in
framingham-
and
I
worked
there
16
years
before
the
plant
was
about
to
close,
but
members
of
my
church
that
I
belong
to
out
there
at
that
time.
Okay,
greater
framingham
community
church,
we
got
together
and
we
started
an
investment
club
in
1983.
B
wow.
So
I
was
in
the
club
for
a
while
got
out
of
the
club,
I'm
back
in
it
now.
So
that's
one
of
the
toughest
things
I
do,
I'm
the
financial
partner
for
my
investment
club,
because
my
background
is
really
accounting,
so
I
left
college
with
a
bachelor
of
science
in
accounting.
I
loved
doing
that
type
work.
I
ended
up
getting
my
mba
from
babson
college
okay,
so
all
of
this
has
been
a
journey,
of
course,
but
I
love
being
active
in
my.
A
A
A
A
Say
that
I
have
to
look
at
what
a
black
figure
and
not
saying
that
I
am
amazed
about
people's
accomplishments,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we
need
to
have
other
conversations
about
people
who
contribute
it.
That's
right
right
exactly
to
the
struggle.
Yes,
they
have
because
they
felt
the
need
because
their
people
were
going
through
something
similar
as
exactly
you
know
this,
the
people
in
the
civil
rights
movement
right,
we
can
call
them
our.
B
A
A
Yes,
the
whole
staff
is
amazing,
they've
been
so
good
to
us
exactly.
B
A
I
have
the
pleasure
of
we're
going
to
get
off
the
topic
of
maya.
Yes,
I
had
the
pleasure
of
watching
a
film
at
bunker
hill.
You
provided
us
with
a
nice
atmosphere
and
I
think
we
shared
that
classroom
with
your
students.
Yes,.
B
A
A
A
Definitely
I
was
so
excited
with
that
because
I
didn't
know
about
the
subject
right
right,
right
and.
B
Exactly
definitely,
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of.
A
B
A
A
B
B
A
B
You
know
if
students
put
themselves
and
take
advantage
of
the
education
there.
Yes,
the
chelsea
public
schools
is
a
good
school
system.
A
Yeah
no
disrespect
to
them
at
all.
My
daughter
as
well,
yes,
went
through
the
chelsea
run
publicly.
B
A
She
had
great
teachers,
that's
right.
I
remember
when
bu
came
in
yeah
and
took
over
the
curriculum.
B
A
Right
right,
my
daughter
was
one
of
the
first
students
to
go
to
the
boys.
A
B
A
A
With
the
chelsea
high
school,
yes-
and
I
feel
that
he
got
the
best
education.
B
B
A
B
B
So
the
students
that
are
at
chelsea
just
need
to
stick
to
it.
Yeah,
you
know,
keep
your
eyes
on
the
prize
is
what
they
call
it.
That's.
B
A
That
keep
your
eyes
on
the
prize
and
your
elders
keep
your
eyes
on
the
prize
as
well,
because
we
will
be
back
together
once
everybody,
you
know,
gets
their
shots
and
they're
feeling.
Well,
I'm
sure
that
we'll
be
able
to
congregate
and
be,
but
this
is
our
way
of
showing
you
that
we
love
you.
We
miss
you,
because
this
year
we
probably
would
have
did
something
more
fabulous.
A
B
B
B
Did
you
want
to
see
me
broken
about
head
and
lowered
eyes
shoulders
falling
down
like
tear
drops
weakened
by
my
soulful
cries?
Does
my
heartiness
offend
you?
Don't
you
take
it
awful
hard
because
I
love
like
I've
got
gold
mines
digging
in
my
own
backyard.
You
may
shoot
me
with
your
words.
You
may
cut
me
with
your
eyes.
B
B
I
mean
black
ocean
leaping
and
wide
welling
and
swelling.
I
bear
in
the
tide,
leaving
behind
nights
of
terror
and
fear.
I
rise
into
a
daybreak,
that's
wonderfully
clear.
I
rise
bring
the
gifts
that
my
ancestors
gave.
I
am
the
dream
and
the
hope
of
the
slave.
I
rise.
I
rise.
I
rise
that
was
beautiful.
A
So
beautiful-
and
on
that
note
yes,
this
is
this-
is
the
the
whole
meaning
of
this
platform,
yeah
yeah,
that
would
you
just
right.
A
Generations
to
rise
up
and
be
the
best
that
you
can
be.
You
know
you're
going
to
make
mistakes
along
the
way
and
that's
okay.
We
learn
from
our
mistakes
and
then
we
move
on
and
we
just
be
the
best
human
being
that
we
can
be
because
that's
at
the
end
of
the
day,
there's
no
race
for
me,
but
the
human
race.
That's
right
and
I'm
gonna
close
on
that
note.
A
You
know
that
can
inspire
that's.