Meet Ainka
Inspirational speaker, facilitator, and advocate for nonviolence, unarmed truth, the Beloved Community and Selma 2.0.
"You can't build the Beloved Community without being the Beloved Community"
Ainka Jackson is the founding Executive Director of the Selma Center for Nonviolence, Truth and Reconciliation, which is committed to bridging divides and building the Beloved Community. She is also the Co-Executive Director of the Selma Bridge Crossing Jubilee, the largest, annual Civil Rights Commemoration in the Country. She was previously the Metro Guardian ad Litem for the Metro Nashville Public Defender's Office, Juvenile Division where she represented children who were abused and neglected. She has also been a case manager in the foster care system, a teacher and an adult Public Defender. Born in Montgomery, Alabama and raised in Selma, Alabama, Jackson appreciates that every successful legal and legislative movement required a people movement. Therefore, she also helps to organize the community to address racial and economic inequities. Jackson, an inaugural Obama USA Leader, has presented at numerous conferences and institutions including, on truancy and the school-to-prison pipeline at the Samuel Dewitt Proctor Institute for Child Advocate Ministry and spoke at the United Nations in Switzerland about economic and racial equity as well as at the White House, the Department of Justice, the National Association of Secretaries of State and a mainstage speaker at the Obama Foundation’s Democracy Forum. Jackson has also been featured in Essence Magazine for her voter mobilization efforts.
Jackson received the first annual In Peace & Freedom Award in 2016 and is a level 3 certified Kingian Nonviolence Conflict Reconciliation trainer. Jackson was instrumental in Selma being chosen as 1 of 14 sites for the Kellogg Foundation’s Truth, Racial Healing and Transformation initiative and she currently leads Selma’s programmatic work for that initiative. She is the co-creator of the Beyond Divide and Conquer: Unite and Build Racial Equity Training, which explores how the social construct of race was created to divide and conquer (especially poor whites and people of color). Using first-person historical narratives, the training questions what’s the cost of racism for people of color and white people and how we can resist divide and conquer and unite and build. Jackson has also been a Special Advisor for the ABA Commission for Homelessness and Poverty, Special Counsel and Counsel Member to the ABA Civil Rights and Social Justice Section, as well as a W.K. Kellogg Foundation Community Leadership Network Class Two Fellow and Telos Group board member.
Jackson is the creator and editor of the Selma Superheroes Children’s Book Series that shares the history of Selma’s foot soldiers and encourages youth to be Selma 2.0 Solutionaries. Jackson is a graduate of Spelman College and Vanderbilt Law School. She has three beautiful, brilliant, benevolent children. She speaks these descriptions to children she encounters.


