She Knew Mandela And Ran A Prison Arts Program. Next Up: The Honolulu Ethics Commission
Tadia Rice, nominated by Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi, has a diverse and colorful resume far from the norm on the ethics board.
Tadia Rice, nominated by Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi, has a diverse and colorful resume far from the norm on the ethics board.
Tadia Rice jokes that she鈥檚 lived long enough to have five careers.
She鈥檚 been an anti-apartheid activist, a singer, a nonprofit executive, an advocate for female prisoners, a filmmaker and a radio host, to name a few.
Rice is also a consultant whose resume reflects clients as varied as the late performer Prince and the secretive U.S. National Security Agency. She knew the late Nelson Mandela, the legendary South African president. She’s even been knighted, though not by British royalty. The honor was bestowed by a family of charities called the .
Now, Rice is up for a new role. Mayor Rick Blangiardi has to join the Honolulu Ethics Commission. If confirmed by the Honolulu City Council, Rice will join a group charged with promoting ethical conduct in city government, investigating ethics complaints and issuing opinions.聽
鈥淚f we don’t again inculcate in citizenship what ethics means, we get what we vote for,鈥 Rice said.
The group of six volunteers 鈥 Rice would be the seventh 鈥 is currently made up of mostly attorneys. There are three former judges, a lawyer in private practice, a mediator with a Ph.D. and a retired foreign service officer. The members oversee a staff of nearly a dozen attorneys, investigators and support employees.
If confirmed, Rice said she will bring a different perspective to the board.
鈥淚鈥檓 not Pacific Club,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not Bishop Street.鈥
But Rice does have some prominent people in her corner.
Retired Maj. Gen. Suzy Vares-Lum, who is the president of the East-West Center, met Rice in 2017 as they were both accepting a prestigious award: the Ellis Island Medal of Honor. Other honorees that year included Pakistani education advocate Malala Yousafzai and American astronaut Buzz Aldrin.
鈥淪he has a definite passion, real care and concern for elevating the voices of those who are marginalized and not heard,鈥 Vares-Lum said.
Former Office of Hawaiian Affairs CEO Sylvia Hussey endorsed Rice in a .
And Yvonne Chaka Chaka, an iconic South African singer and songwriter often referred to as the Princess of Africa, considers Rice a sister.
In a Zoom interview, Chaka Chaka described her friend as a go-getter with a strong moral compass who has connected with people from all walks of life.
鈥淪he鈥檚 an amazing woman,鈥 the performer said. 鈥淵ou could not have chosen a better person.鈥
‘Strong Sense Of Justice’
Rice, 75, was born in Phoenix but grew up in Washington, D.C.
The daughter of a factory worker and a housewife, Rice said she grew up poor, which motivated her to live a better life.
As a Black teenager during the Civil Rights era, Rice said she experienced two pivotal moments.
For one, she became a member of the Baha’i faith, which aligned with her values. The religion teaches that women and men are equal, there should be no prejudice and there should be spiritual solutions to economic problems, Rice said.
She also learned about apartheid in South Africa. That set her on a journey of activism that continues to this day, she said.
鈥淚 was very driven by the idea of equity, justice, parity, not just gender, but everything 鈥 fat people, Black people, purple people, people who don’t speak English, people who were bent over, it didn’t matter,鈥 she said. 鈥淧eople were people. And so the oneness of humanity is what drove the rest of my life, combined with a very strong sense of justice.鈥
After high school, she said she attended Prescott College in Arizona and worked for years at Xerox and General Electric doing sales and client management, respectively.
By her 30s, Rice said she was a single mom traveling extensively throughout the African continent, where she befriended political organizers in South Africa and what is now Namibia.
In 1994, Rice was an international observer for South Africa鈥檚 first election in which citizens of all races could vote. The election marked the end of apartheid and resulted in Nelson Mandela becoming the country鈥檚 first Black president.
Rice ended up staying for Mandela鈥檚 inauguration and made friends with newly installed government officials, she said. Rice said she was even with Mandela on when he visited the Robben Island prison cell where he had spent 18 years. Mandela’s foundation was not able to verify this, but Rice insists it’s true.
鈥淣othing would surprise me if someone said: ‘Oh, you鈥檙e making this up’,鈥 she said with a laugh. 鈥淣o, I鈥檓 not.鈥
Since then, Rice has held numerous positions, including running Chaka Chaka’s public relations and charitable foundation.
And for the last 15 years, Rice has lived in Hawaii.
Throughout the last decade, she has volunteered in the Women鈥檚 Community Correctional Facility on Oahu, running an expressive arts program for incarcerated women. Inspired by the women鈥檚 stories, she filmed a documentary about them called 鈥淏eyond Bars: Prison Women Speak.鈥 It won Rice a Best First Time Filmmaker award from Cannes International Shorts, an online film contest.
Rice also worked a stint as the CEO of the Hawaii Academy of Recording Arts (which closed during the coronavirus pandemic), and runs a weekly radio show focused on women. She’s also been involved with several community groups including the Kailua Hawaiian Civic Club.
Meanwhile, Rice has paid attention to the goings-on in the community, including the infamous Kealoha scandal. Ex-prosecutor Katherine Kealoha and her husband, former police chief Louis Kealoha, are now in prison following a saga that began when they framed an innocent man for stealing their mailbox. The story unfolded with a side of sex, drugs and bank fraud, and all of it “drove me up a wall,” Rice said.
鈥淚鈥檝e watched corruption reveal itself, especially within law enforcement,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 realize that injustice is more prevalent than justice.鈥
She鈥檚 hoping she can be a force for good on the Ethics Commission.
鈥淭hat is very much part of aloha,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e have to enact our beliefs and translate them into deeds that reflect equality, equity, parity, good governance, fair and transparent operations 鈥 When a society doesn’t have morals, it will collapse on itself. It will implode.鈥
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About the Author
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Christina Jedra is a journalist for Civil Beat focused on investigative and in-depth reporting. You can reach her by email at cjedra@civilbeat.org or follow her on Twitter at .