Commentary: Make tribute to Robinson a lasting one

Setting aside a day each year to honor Jackie Robinson is wonderful. So is Major League Baseball’s decision to retire his No. 42 across the league.

Those tributes, however, are easily forgotten once April 15 comes and goes.

If baseball really wants to pay tribute to Robinson and the legacy he left us, every team should crack open their considerable wallets Sunday and write a check to sponsor a Jackie Robinson Foundation Scholar. Same goes for all the gazillionaires whose career paths would have taken a different turn if not for Robinson.

You really want to honor the man who changed baseball for the better? Then help his foundation level the playing field outside the ballpark.

“It’s a way that I think perpetuates the dream of an authentically inclusive society,” said Della Britton Baeza, president and chief executive officer of the Jackie Robinson Foundation.

“That’s what Jackie wanted: ‘Just give me an opportunity, and I’ll show you I belong here.”‘

A year after Robinson died in 1972, his wife Rachel started the foundation and the scholars’ program. The idea was to give underprivileged minority students money for college along with a support system to help them succeed at the highest levels.

Students receive $6,000 per year for tuition at the college of their choice. Each March, all of the scholars go to New York for 41â2 days of networking and leadership seminars. They’re also exposed to cultural events like plays, ballets and operas.

“Every internship, every job I’ve had the last four years, I’ve gotten from the networking skills I learned from the Jackie Robinson Foundation,” said Judge Gardner III, who already has an engineering job lined up after he graduates from Washington University in St. Louis this spring.

The foundation’s 97 percent graduation rate is more than double the national average for minority students, and well above the average for all students.

More than 1,100 scholarships have been awarded, including 266 this academic year. Graduates have gone on to become, among other things, a classical pianist, a partner at Goldman Sachs and the attorney for the Boston Red Sox.

Right now, only five of the 30 major league teams – the Dodgers, Yankees, Mets, White Sox and Texas Rangers – are sponsoring a scholar. MLB and some of its officers also give to the scholars’ program.

And the hundreds of players making an average of $2.94 million this year? Surely they’d like to show their gratitude for what Robinson did.

Guess not. Derek Jeter and Royce Clayton are the only current players on the scholars’ donor list.

But every year at this time, baseball proudly talks about how much Jackie Robinson meant to the game. How, with dignity and class, he changed the course of American history by not only opening our national pastime to players of every race, but by opening our minds to the promise of a colorblind world.

Giving Robinson a day and putting his number up in ballparks is a fine honor. A signature on a check would be an even better one.