I am a woman of primarily African descent who has lived in Columbia for 20 years and in Maryland for over 45 years. I was born and raised in Richmond, Va., the home of the Confederacy, and I preface my comments with those facts. Having followed the events of the past few days regarding Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, I have several reactions. I do not intend to defend Mr. Northam nor can I judge his heart, but I am willing to hear him out. I appreciate his wanting to have “an honest conversation about racial justice’’ (“Maryland Gov. Hogan says Virginia Gov. Northam should resign after racist yearbook photo scandal,” Feb. 6).

Retired from teaching after many years and now engaged in facilitating courageous conversations, I believe that it is critical that we enter challenging conversations with open minds and hearts. How will we ever overcome the damage, hurt and pain of the past unless we learn from our past and choose to address the roots of the attitudes, policies and practices that have gotten us to where we are today?

Many express the desire to have people in office who are not career politicians, but we are not willing to accept their impolitic responses or to hear them out. Governor Northam has asked to open a conversation about racial justice which is what we all need. Actually, there is a need for many conversations about racial justice with actions to follow to address the historic racial injustice in this country. Whether Mr. Northam remains governor or not is less important than a call for conversations about racial injustice and the critical work that needs to follow those conversations.

Beyond finding out the facts and getting to the bottom of the attitudes that led to the photographs in Ralph Northam’s yearbook, we need to uncover the truth about the origins of those attitudes. How those attitudes have led to the divisions present in every aspect of our country must be addressed and remedied.

Do we believe it is possible for attitudes and actions to change? Are we all doomed by the actions of our past? I believe we can change but unless we are willing to engage in courageous conversations to address our challenging past, our country will be destroyed. Even Abraham Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson, along with many of our honored leaders of the past, had to wrestle with their own contradictions. Do we recognize that a country "divided against itself will not stand?"

Jacquelin McCoy, Columbia