Lehman Today Online Magazine Lehman Today Fall 2015 | Page 30

My Day with President Obama Scott Davis sitting next to President Obama Scott Davis was feeling anxious. He was about to meet the President of the United States, and he wanted to make a good impression. Of course, he had spent the past two days preparing for the event by making sure he had the right outfit to wear, studying up on current events, and even preparing thank-you notes for key people involved in selecting him for the honor. Davis is nothing if not meticulously prepared. But he wasn’t always so. Raised by a single mother, Davis and his four siblings lived in a housing project in Yonkers, NY. He grew up the way many poor young Black men in a single-parent household with an absent father do—disconnected and adrift. Like countless teenagers before him he struggled to find meaning and purpose in his life, squeaking through high school with no real plans for college. After graduating from Yonkers High School in 2009, Davis took a year off and contemplated his future while working in retail. It was his mother who urged him to apply to college. “You can do it, Scott,” she would say to him. “You’re smart and you’re capable.” So when Davis finally applied to schools, he admitted he did it for his mother, so she would leave him alone. “It was the best decision I ever made,” he recalled with a smile. President Barack Obama had chosen Lehman College as the venue to announce the formation of the My Brother’s Keeper Alliance, a new independent nonprofit foundation that aims to address opportunity gaps among young men and boys of color. About a dozen young Black and Latino men from across the nation were invited to meet with President Obama, who wanted to have an intimate chat about what it means to be a young male minority in this country and about responsibility. By mid-morning, Davis and the other young men were being escorted through the corridors of the Music Building to the third floor Hearth Room, where they would meet President Obama. The excitement was palpable, and it was not lost on Davis that he would soon be in the presence of one of the most powerful leaders in the world. As he entered the room, Davis immediately took in the room’s arrangements—tables had been set up in a U