From Emilia Sykes <[email protected]>
Subject Erasing history doesn’t make us stronger. It makes us forget.
Date February 4, 2026 9:51 PM
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[link removed] [[link removed]] Happy Black History Month, John.

Protecting our past is essential to safeguarding our future. I believe that deeply — not just as a member of Congress, but as someone who grew up watching history being made in my own family.

Emilia Sykes and mom [[link removed]]

My mom, Barbara, became the first Black woman to serve on the Akron City Council. I saw up close what it meant to challenge expectations, open doors, and fight for a community that hadn’t always been represented. Years later, I followed in her footsteps — becoming the first Black woman under 30 elected to the Ohio legislature, and eventually the first Black person ever elected to represent Ohio’s 13th Congressional District.

Those “firsts” didn’t happen by accident. They happened because people refused to let their stories be erased or ignored, and because history was told honestly — even when it made people uncomfortable.

That’s why what we’re seeing right now is so concerning.

The current administration has ordered reviews of African American exhibits at institutions like the National Museum of African American History and Culture, claiming they want a more “positive” version of America’s story.

Rewriting or softening history doesn’t make our country stronger. It makes it easier to forget how progress actually happens — and easier for injustice to repeat itself.

Black history is American history. It tells the truth about struggle and resilience, about barriers broken and rights earned. When that history is erased or sanitized, it becomes harder to recognize injustice in the present and easier to accept it as normal.

I’ve seen what happens when history is honored instead of hidden. Watching my mom break barriers gave me the strength to do the same — and I know future generations are counting on us to protect those stories, not bury them.

In Congress, I will fight every day to protect our history and defend our rights — unlike the GOP and the current administration, who are trying to rewrite the past to justify rolling back progress. Telling the full story of who we are makes us stronger and better prepared to build a future that works for everyone.

This Black History Month, let’s recommit to truth — because protecting our past is how we safeguard our future.

Thank you for standing with me.

Emilia Sykes
A native of Akron, Ohio, Emilia Sykes has deep roots fighting for Ohioans. She learned from a young age how to use her voice and the power of the people to create change.
In 2022, Congresswoman Sykes was elected to represent Ohio’s newly redrawn 13th Congressional District, winning one of the toughest races in the country. Emilia has cut through the divisiveness to deliver results.
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Emilia Sykes is running for re-election in Ohio's 13th Congressional District. To learn more, please visit EmiliaSykesForCongress.com [[link removed]]
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Emilia Sykes for Congress
PO Box 1347
Akron, OH 44309
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