Aurelia Brazeal
Retired Ambassador
Ambassador Aurelia (Rea) Brazeal retired from the U.S. Foreign Service in 2008, with the rank of Career Minister, after a distinguished 40-year career. She is an expert in leadership, management, strategic planning, crisis management, and economic and trade negotiations, and is adept at engaging constructively with disparate audiences and resolving complex problems. She was a pioneer in being the first to serve in newly created positions and is the first African American woman career Foreign Service officer to be promoted into the Senior Foreign Service and the first to be nominated as an Ambassador.
She served most recently as Ambassador to Ethiopia, previously to Kenya, and initially to The Federated States of Micronesia. She also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and the Pacific with policy responsibility for 22 countries.
Ambassador Brazeal is from Atlanta, Georgia, and received her Bachelor’s Degree from Spelman College and her Master’s Degree from Columbia University. She served five terms on the Spelman College Board of Trustees. She works with the Charles B. Rangel and the Thomas R. Pickering fellowship programs that bring diversity to the Foreign Service. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs, the American Academy of Diplomacy, The Far East Luncheon Group, the American Foreign Service Association, and The Senior Seminar Alumni Association. She is the immediate past President of the Association of Black American Ambassadors. She served on the Advisory Boards of the Morehouse College Andrew Young Center for International Affairs and The Encampment for Citizenship.
America's Field Trip
Engaging students nationwide to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary!
This contest invites students in grades 3–12 to share their perspectives on what America means to them — and earn the opportunity to travel for field trip experiences at some of the nation’s most iconic historic and cultural landmarks.