As a young beauty pageant contestant, DeGalynn Wade Sanders polished an original dance and spoken-word routine that she called, simply, "The Dream Factor."
The future Miss Black Minnesota would remove layers of clothing as she twirled on stage. As each layer was peeled off, another stage of her life was revealed. Spinning, Sanders went from being a young girl devouring books to a high school cheerleader, mother and successful attorney.
Then, with a pile of garments beside her, she would strip down to a final outfit, a black robe — revealing her burning ambition to be a judge.
Over the next 24 years, Sanders would fulfill all the dreams she performed on stage, except one. After a 4 ½-year battle with cancer, Sanders died at a hospital near her home in Edina without ever achieving her lifelong ambition of serving on the bench. She was 43.
"If cancer had not gotten in the way, DeGalynn would certainly have been a judge — and a highly distinguished one," said Larry Leventhal, her father and a Twin Cities attorney. "This talented light was taken much too soon."
Sanders overcame poverty, racism and a long struggle with vision loss to become an acclaimed attorney for low-income families and a mentor to young women.
The beauty queen, who was crowned Miss Black Minnesota and named second runner-up for Miss Black USA, could have pursued a lucrative career as a corporate attorney. Instead, as a lawyer for legal aid, Sanders helped domestic violence victims escape abusive marriages, helped mothers collect child support and represented poor families being evicted from their homes.
Known as a fierce litigator, Sanders was not afraid to take on complicated cases.