These last months, St. Catherine University President ReBecca Koenig Roloff says she's drawn inspiration from a friend's comment on the morning after the election.
"She said, 'I'm jealous of you. You woke up with great work to do,' " the leader of St. Paul's St. Kate's reported last week.
A sense that a moment has come for more women to put their shoulders to democracy's wheel has been widely felt in Minnesota and the rest of the nation since Donald Trump won the presidency by defeating a major party's first female nominee.
Make that shoulders to the wheel and feet on the ground — as illustrated by Saturday's massive women's marches in Washington, St. Paul and an astounding 600 or more locations around the country.
It's fitting that a delegation from the Abigail Quigley McCarthy Center for Women at St. Catherine University planned to join the assemblage at the State Capitol. (I say "planned" because this column has a Friday deadline.) And that the new president of the school that not long ago was known the College of St. Catherine, the largest Catholic women's college in the land, planned to walk and stand among them.
Not all Katies were Clinton voters, Roloff said. But many identified on some level with a candidate whose qualifications included a 1969 baccalaureate degree from all-female Wellesley College. Many were angered when Clinton's credentials were discounted. When fake news smeared her. When she was blamed for the misdeeds of her husband. When Trump's insults and boasts about mistreatment of women were deemed acceptable.
More than 44 percent of students in the College for Women (St. Kate's traditional undergraduate program) are students of color. Many are first-generation Americans. They listened to the campaign's heated rhetoric and wondered whether they belong in this country, Roloff related.
Days before the election and just two weeks after Roloff's inauguration, anxiety was running so high on campus that student leaders approached her with a request. After a career that included 11 years in the female-empowerment business as CEO of YWCA Minneapolis, Roloff would be worth hearing no matter the election's outcome, the students said. Would she convene a campuswide meeting on Nov. 9? Would she speak?