Born the granddaughter of sharecroppers from the Deep South, she grew up hearing stories of how her grandmother couldn’t finish high school because the Colored school was too far away to afford transportation, and how all three of her other grandparents needed to drop out of school to pick cotton.
“My grandpa was the definition of hard working, he made a way for his family without being able to read and write and was able to start his own small business cleaning construction sites and selling scrap metal, on top of working two other jobs for his family.”
This hard work paved the way for her own parents to both earn their college degrees. Her mother then rose from a clerk typist position at the local public housing authority to its executive director over a 40-year career. Her father was a reverend and pastor who juggled ministry with a full-time job. Both taught her the importance of serving others, especially the most vulnerable. Now, Joele sees herself carrying the torch.
“I understand that I've had a level of privilege that very, very few people who look like me have,” Joele reflected. "My parents always said, if you're a janitor, be the best janitor you can be. Meaning, be a hard worker, and wherever that leads you, do it with integrity."