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Daily Inspiration Quote by Anita Hill

"I think, though, as African-American women, we are always trained to value our community even at the expense of ourselves, and so we attempt to protect the African-American community"

About this Quote

There is a quiet indictment hiding inside Hill's careful phrasing. "I think, though" softens the entry, but what follows is not tentative at all: a description of conditioning so ingrained it feels like training. By choosing "trained" rather than "taught" or "encouraged", Hill frames self-sacrifice as a system, not a personality trait. It suggests repetition, discipline, consequences. The line lands because it names an expectation that is often praised as strength while functioning as a constraint.

The quote’s subtext cuts in two directions. First, it recognizes the real stakes behind communal loyalty: Black communities, historically under siege, have needed internal cohesion as a form of survival. "Protect" isn’t abstract; it evokes shielding against racist institutions, hostile media, and punitive public judgment. At the same time, Hill exposes the gendered cost of that protection. The burden falls on African-American women to manage the community’s image, absorb harm quietly, and treat their own injury as expendable if it might be weaponized from outside.

The context matters: Hill’s public life has been defined by what happens when personal testimony collides with collective politics. In the wake of her 1991 testimony against Clarence Thomas, she became a symbol precisely because she disrupted a familiar script: the expectation that Black women will carry the community’s needs, even when the community refuses to carry them back. Her sentence captures the cruel paradox of respectability and solidarity: when protection becomes reflex, it can also become self-erasure.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Hill, Anita. (2026, January 17). I think, though, as African-American women, we are always trained to value our community even at the expense of ourselves, and so we attempt to protect the African-American community. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-though-as-african-american-women-we-are-44163/

Chicago Style
Hill, Anita. "I think, though, as African-American women, we are always trained to value our community even at the expense of ourselves, and so we attempt to protect the African-American community." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-though-as-african-american-women-we-are-44163/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I think, though, as African-American women, we are always trained to value our community even at the expense of ourselves, and so we attempt to protect the African-American community." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-think-though-as-african-american-women-we-are-44163/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Anita Hill

Anita Hill (born July 30, 1956) is a Professor from USA.

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