MLK Day Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/mlk-day/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Wed, 21 Jan 2026 19:48:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 MLK Day 2026: 鈥楨nvironmental justice is a civil rights issue鈥 /now/news/2026/mlk-day-2026-environmental-justice-is-a-civil-rights-issue/ /now/news/2026/mlk-day-2026-environmental-justice-is-a-civil-rights-issue/#respond Tue, 20 Jan 2026 19:39:43 +0000 /now/news/?p=60393 黑料正能量 celebrates Martin Luther King Jr. Day with focus on sustainability

黑料正能量 hosted its ninth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Monday, Jan. 19, featuring a series of events honoring the life and legacy of the late civil rights leader.

The theme of this year鈥檚 celebration was 鈥淏eyond the Dream: Social Justice and Ecological Consciousness,鈥 and it focused on the message of Dr. King鈥檚 1967 Christmas sermon, in which he preached about all life on Earth being interconnected. 鈥淲hatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly,鈥 he said.


Students carry signs around the indoor track during Monday morning鈥檚 unity march.

Monday鈥檚 events began at 9:45 a.m. with a unity march inside the University Commons. 黑料正能量 two dozen students, faculty, and staff members held signs calling for peace and justice as they completed three laps around the indoor track. Each year, the unity march pays tribute to the many nonviolent marches led by Dr. King and others during the civil rights movement. 


The group of marchers proceeded to Lehman Auditorium, where members of the Black Student Alliance (BSA) and other students shared quotes from Dr. King and reflected on his legacy during Speak Out. One quote that resonated deeply was: 鈥淚njustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.鈥

Celeste Thomas, director of Multicultural Student Services at 黑料正能量 and chair of the committee planning the MLK Jr. celebration, said Dr. King imagined a world with community instead of chaos, love instead of hate, and no one going hungry. He imagined a world where families are not separated, where there are no food deserts and everyone has clean water, and where countries don鈥檛 bully one another for resources, she added. 鈥淏eloved community is sustainability for all mankind,鈥 she said.

Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed, director of alumni engagement and community connections at 黑料正能量, spoke about the theme of the day. 鈥淕oing beyond the dream means understanding justice is not passive,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t requires participation, it requires responsibility, and that鈥檚 where you come in, 黑料正能量 students. You鈥檙e not on the sidelines of this work. You are already shaping the future of communities like Harrisonburg through the choices you make, the careers you pursue, the voices you raise, and the values you carry forward. Don鈥檛 just remember him, carry his dream forward.鈥

Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus spoke about Claudette Colvin, a 15-year-old who was arrested in 1955 for refusing to give up her seat on a segregated bus in Montgomery, Alabama, nine months before Rosa Parks did the same. Dycus, who noted that Colvin passed away on Jan. 13, 2026, said the young activist had inspired her for many years. 鈥淏oth King and Colvin teach us what justice and power look like in necessary ways,鈥 Dycus said. 鈥淲e gather not out of tradition, not because the calendar tells us to, but because we are committed to taking seriously the work of building equitable, compassionate, and just communities. This is who we are, not just what we do.鈥


Author and philosophy professor Ol煤f岷固乵i O. T谩铆w貌 leads Monday鈥檚 convocation.

Ol煤f岷固乵i O. T谩铆w貌, an associate professor of philosophy at Georgetown University and a fellow at the Climate and Community Institute, served as the featured speaker for the Martin Luther King Jr. Day Convocation. He is the author of Elite Capture and Reconsidering Reparations, a contributor to Greta Thunberg鈥檚 The Climate Book, and a past recipient of a Marguerite Casey Freedom Scholar fellowship. His presentation was titled 鈥淏ecoming Firefighters: Climate Justice and the Fight for a Free World.鈥

He examined recent actions taken by the federal administration to seize oil assets in Venezuela and spoke about the political and economic power of fossil fuel companies. 鈥淭he control those people and their allies have over our entire lives depends on the political power they wield and defend with the money they get destroying our air and water,鈥 he said. 


A ceremony on Monday rededicated the 黑料正能量 Peace Pole.

Following the convocation, a ceremony on Thomas Plaza rededicated the 黑料正能量 Peace Pole with a vision for peace, justice, and shalom on Earth, including all living things (represented by a new plaque featuring animal prints). The Peace Pole was recently resealed and painted and has newly installed 鈥淢ay Peace Prevail on Earth鈥 plaques. 


Simone McKelvey of Simone & Tuesday (pictured on right) guides students in crafting their own handmade soap. She has been making her own soap since 2013 and sells her soap at the Staunton Farmers鈥 Market.

Throughout the day, the conference room inside the Student Life Suite transformed into an aromatherapy space, filled with the scents of soap and essential oils. Simone McKelvey, owner of the Simone & Tuesday skincare brand, led two interactive demonstrations, teaching students, faculty, and staff how to create their own soap from scratch using natural ingredients. 鈥淵our skin is your largest organ,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd a lot of the time, we don鈥檛 pay attention to what we put on it.鈥

Participants worked in pairs at eight slow cookers, melting coconut, sunflower, and castor oils, adding lye to distilled water, and mixing the concoction with a stick blender and essential oils to create bars of soap. 鈥淲hen you go to the store and visit the soap aisle, some of them are soap, but some of them aren鈥檛,鈥 McKelvey said. 鈥淪ome are detergents made with synthetic chemicals. True soap is what you鈥檙e making today.鈥


A student participating in a fire cider demonstration on Monday fills a glass jar with ingredients submerged in apple cider vinegar.

The sound of knives chopping onions, horseradish, garlic, hot peppers, ginger, and other vegetables reverberated through the Old Common Grounds space on Monday as participants in two interactive workshops sliced and diced fresh, locally sourced, organic ingredients to create their own jars of fire cider. The apple cider vinegar-based tonic supports immunity and digestion and is packed with  antioxidants, antibacterials, and antimicrobials, making it an ideal remedy for the colder months. In about four weeks, the jars can be strained and used to enhance everything from seltzer water and salad dressing to collard greens, pickles, and hot toddies.

The demonstrations were led by the sister-owners of Kinfolk Farm, a Black women-led farm in rural West Virginia dedicated to nourishing the brilliance, creativity, and legacy of Black and Indigenous people of the Global Majority.


Scroll through a photo album of the day below!

Thanks to Multicultural Student Services, Student Life, and the office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for planning the series of meaningful and educational events to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

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黑料正能量 hosts MLK celebration with full lineup of events /now/news/2026/emu-hosts-mlk-celebration-with-full-lineup-of-events/ /now/news/2026/emu-hosts-mlk-celebration-with-full-lineup-of-events/#respond Wed, 14 Jan 2026 16:42:48 +0000 /now/news/?p=60373 黑料正能量 will host its ninth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Monday, Jan. 19.

This year鈥檚 lineup of events includes a convocation with author and philosophy professor Ol煤f岷固乵i O. T谩铆w貌, two workshops teaching participants how to create their own handmade soap, and two sessions demonstrating the use and benefits of a spicy, vinegar-based tonic known as 鈥渇ire cider.鈥 All events are open to the public.

The celebration is themed 鈥淏eyond the Dream: Social Justice and Ecological Consciousness鈥 and centers around the words of Dr. King鈥檚 鈥淎 Christmas Sermon on Peace鈥 speech from 1967:

It really boils down to this: that all life is interrelated. We are all caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied into a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects on directly, affects all indirectly.

The chosen theme closely aligns with the university theme of sustainability for the 2025-26 academic year. 鈥淭hat was intentional,鈥 said Celeste Thomas, director of multicultural student services at 黑料正能量 and chair of the committee planning the celebration. 鈥淭his is a good time in our country to remember that not everyone is equally privileged and that we should really pay attention to Dr. King鈥檚 quote. We are all interconnected, and it鈥檚 a great time to practice self-care and self-awareness, recognizing that everyone鈥檚 journey is different.鈥

Monday鈥檚 events start at 9:45 a.m. in University Commons with a Unity March around the indoor track. The march will proceed to Lehman Auditorium, where an open forum-style Speak Out event will be held at 10 a.m.

Convocation

Convocation at 10:15 a.m. in Lehman Auditorium will be led by , an associate professor of philosophy at Georgetown University and a fellow at the Climate and Community Institute. T谩铆w貌 is the author of Elite Capture and Reconsidering Reparations, a contributor to Greta Thunberg鈥檚 The Climate Book, and a past recipient of a Marguerite Casey Freedom Scholar fellowship. His presentation will be livestreamed on and uploaded to the 黑料正能量 .

鈥淎 lot of his work is around social justice reparations and how it connects to sustainability, which we鈥檒l hear in his speech,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淗e really fits what we want to do and the message we want to convey.鈥

Following his convocation, a soul food lunch will be served from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Northlawn Cafeteria. From 1:30 to 2:30 p.m., T谩铆w貌 will lead a Q&A session at the MainStage Theater (University Commons 170). 

Soapmaking

In the afternoon, two 鈥淪kin Sabbath鈥 soapmaking sessions led by Simone McKelvey of Simone & Tuesday will be held in University Commons 211/212. The first session will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the second session will be from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. Limited space is available for participation and advance is required. Seats will be available for unregistered participants who can watch the demonstrations.

Simone & Tuesday is a natural skincare solutions company founded on the belief that healthier skin should be natural, affordable, and for everyone. Through her soapmaking sessions, McKelvey teaches small groups how to make their own all-natural, personal care products.

“We held an event called ‘Hairitage’ last February with BSA during Black History Month, where students made their own hair products, and it was packed,” Thomas said. 鈥淭hat helped me realize that this generation of students responds well to hands-on activities. They enjoy the opportunity to take something home with them when they leave.鈥

Fire cider

A pair of fire cider workshops led by Kinfolk Farm will be held at the Old Common Grounds space (University Commons 177) from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. Limited space is also available for participation in this event and so advance is required.听Seats will be available for unregistered participants who can watch the demonstrations.

The Black woman-led farm in rural West Virginia is dedicated to nourishing the brilliance, creativity, and legacy of Black, indigenous people of the Global Majority. At Kinfolk Farm, food sovereignty, land liberation, and healing justice are daily practices woven into the way they plant, harvest, cook, and gather in community.

Participants in these two interactive sessions will learn the history of fire cider along with its traditional wellness practices. They’ll also be invited to try a sample! The spicy, tangy folk remedy is often used to support the immune system and is typically made by infusing apple cider vinegar with ingredients such as horseradish, ginger, garlic, onion, hot peppers, and honey. 

Climate simulation

A world climate simulation facilitated by Levi Clymer 鈥25, 黑料正能量 event operations coordinator, will be held from 2:45 to 4:45 p.m. at the University Commons Student Union. Participants in this interactive exercise will act out the roles of international delegates at a United Nations summit and negotiate a global agreement to prevent the worst impacts of climate change. is also needed to participate in this event.

In case of changes to events due to inclement weather, visit for updates.

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黑料正能量 hosts eighth annual ‘day on’ to celebrate life, legacy of MLK /now/news/2025/emu-hosts-eighth-annual-day-on-to-celebrate-life-legacy-of-mlk/ Tue, 21 Jan 2025 21:48:47 +0000 /now/news/?p=58088 黑料正能量 hosted a full day of events on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025, to observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day. This marked the eighth annual day of education, learning and service held at 黑料正能量 to celebrate the life and legacy of the civil rights and peace leader.

The morning kicked off with a unity march around the indoor track in University Commons. Students, faculty, staff and other community members held signs with messages of peace and justice.


During an open forum event called Speak Out, students and staff shared quotes from Dr. King that resonated with them and spoke to the theme of the day, 鈥淩adical Truth-telling.鈥 Celeste Thomas, director of multicultural student services and chair of the committee planning the day鈥檚 events, said: 鈥淪ilence is not always golden, and if the narrative is wrong, we need to correct it.鈥


The life of Dr. King is a special model for 黑料正能量, explained President Dr. Susan Schultz Huxman in her remarks at Convocation, as the university aspires to fulfill its vision.

鈥淎s we honor King鈥檚 legacy today, we underscore the ways our educational core values of academic excellence, peace and justice, and active faith intersect at 黑料正能量 as we form a discerning community of learners,鈥 she said.

Huxman, who is retiring at the end of the 2024-25 academic year after having served nine years as 黑料正能量鈥檚 ninth president and first woman president, was instrumental in working with Thomas to create a day of events at 黑料正能量 to commemorate Dr. King. During only her second year at 黑料正能量, the inaugural MLK Jr. Celebration was approved as a 鈥渄ay on鈥 for learning, education, and service. 

鈥淎t 黑料正能量, we take the full day to commemorate, reflect, serve, and take inspiration from the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.,鈥 Huxman said in her remarks. 鈥淲e take the day off so we can take the day on. So, while there are no classes, there is lots of engaged learning going on. So, seize the day, 黑料正能量 Royals!鈥

“We take the day off so we can take the day on.”

黑料正能量 President Susan Schultz Huxman

The 黑料正能量 Gospel Choir, led by senior music major Kay Pettus and accompanied by Music Program Director Dr. David Berry on piano, performed 鈥淟ift Every Voice and Sing,鈥 鈥淓very Praise鈥 and Stevie Wonder鈥檚 鈥淗appy Birthday,鈥 a song that celebrates King鈥檚 Jan. 15 birthday.


Jodie Geddes MA 鈥16, an international speaker on restorative justice, author, and advocate of racial healing and justice, served as keynote speaker for Convocation. She spoke about her work on a truth-telling project shining light on the 1919 massacre in Elaine, Arkansas, as well as her experiences at a reconciliation village in Rwanda that seeks to unite survivors and perpetrators of the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi. A video recording of Convocation is available to watch on the 黑料正能量 Facebook page .


In the MainStage Theater, 黑料正能量 History Professor Dr. Mark Sawin delivered a riveting presentation on the history of the family who lived in and operated the at  252 N. Mason St. in Harrisonburg. The five-bedroom, one-bathroom house was listed in several editions of The Green Book, a guide featuring businesses across the nation that welcomed Black travelers during Jim Crow, until the early 1960s. The professor, who serves as the consulting historian for the house, used old photos found inside the home, interviews with neighbors, and clippings of archived Daily News-Record articles to weave together stories of the people who lived and stayed there. These days, the family of Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed, director of alumni engagement and community connections at 黑料正能量, own the property and are in the process of transitioning the ownership to a 501c3 nonprofit.


On Monday afternoon, conversation circles facilitated by the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding (CJP) encouraged open dialogue and guided discussion about radical truth-telling. Geddes was on hand at the Studio Theater for a workshop (pictured above) that engaged in journaling, meditation, and therapeutic processes.


In the evening, students gathered at University Commons for a special event where they could make their own hair care products.


Coverage of the day from local media

  • WHSV-TV:
  • Daily News-Record:
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黑料正能量 to host MLK Jr. Celebration /now/news/2025/emu-to-host-mlk-jr-celebration/ Mon, 13 Jan 2025 20:56:26 +0000 /now/news/?p=58036 This story has been updated to reflect changes due to inclement weather.


黑料正能量 will host the eighth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration on Sunday, Jan. 19, and Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.

This year鈥檚 MLK Day is themed 鈥淩adical Truth-telling鈥 and centers around the words of a 1947 essay written by King while at Morehouse College: 鈥淓ducation must enable one to sift and weigh evidence, to discern the true from the false, the real from the unreal, and the facts from the fiction.鈥 

A film screening of 鈥淏lack Wall Street Burning鈥 will take place from 6-8 p.m. on Sunday has been postponed until Monday, January 27. The film is a retelling of the Tulsa race massacre of 1921, when mobs of white residents attacked Black residents and destroyed homes and businesses of the Greenwood District in Tulsa, Oklahoma. A talkback session will follow the screening.听

Monday鈥檚 activities include a 9:45 a.m. Unity March in University Commons, a 10 a.m. Speak Out at Lehman Auditorium, and a 10:15 a.m. Convocation featuring Jodie Geddes MA 鈥16. Geddes, co-author of The Little Book of Racial Healing, advocate for racial healing and justice, and international speaker on restorative justice, will deliver a talk on 鈥淩adical Truth-telling.鈥

Other events on Monday include a soul food lunch at Northlawn Cafeteria, circle processes facilitated by the Center for Justice & Peacebuilding, a Black hair care and free cuts event, and a session on the history of Harrisonburg鈥檚 Ida Mae Francis Guest House. This last event, hosted by Professor Mark Sawin, is from 1:30-3 p.m. in University Commons 176.

A three-part 鈥淩esistance and Rest鈥 workshop, hosted by Geddes, will be held from 3-5 p.m. in the Studio Theater. The workshop will engage in journaling, meditation and therapeutic processes.

Celeste Thomas, director of multicultural student services at 黑料正能量 and chair of the committee planning the celebration, said this year鈥檚 theme of 鈥淩adical Truth-telling鈥 challenges us to embrace Dr. King鈥檚 vision by confronting uncomfortable truths and fostering honest dialogue about our shared history and future.

鈥淭hrough these events, which reflect 黑料正能量鈥檚 values of academic excellence, peace and justice, and active faith, we hope to inspire our community to engage in meaningful reflection and action,鈥 Thomas said.

黑料正能量 the Convocation speaker

Jodie Geddes holds an MA in conflict transformation from 黑料正能量鈥檚 Center for Justice & Peacebuilding. While at 黑料正能量, Geddes explored the intersections of peacebuilding, restorative justice and systems change. She works with , providing support for community members experiencing crises with mental wellness as well as other community resources. She is the co-manager for , a nonprofit affiliated with 黑料正能量 that provides training and resources for communities and individuals to explore the history and legacy of enslavement.

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PHOTO GALLERY: 黑料正能量 celebrates MLK Day /now/news/2024/photo-gallery-emu-celebrates-mlk-day/ Tue, 16 Jan 2024 22:06:51 +0000 /now/news/?p=55451 Despite a hefty snowfall on Monday, the weather did little to dampen spirits and deter 黑料正能量 students, faculty, staff and community members from showing up to the university’s annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration.

The event, which has been held since 2019, honors the life and legacy of the late civil rights leader. This year’s theme was 鈥淩emember, Celebrate, Thrive” and featured a tour of the Northeast Neighborhood on Saturday, a movie screening of Rustin on Sunday, and a full slate of activities on Monday, which are recapped below.


Convocation featuring the Virginia Union University Gospel Choir

The Virginia Union University Gospel Choir, which hosted the 黑料正能量 Chamber Singers at its Richmond campus in October (read about that here), traveled to Harrisonburg, Virginia, on Monday to perform a series of songs for Convocation. VUU Choir Director Joel Lester led 13 members of the group in seven soulful and spirited songs that had many in the Lehman Auditorium pews dancing and clapping along. The Chamber Singers joined the VUU Gospel Choir on stage for a performance of “I Need You to Survive” to close out the concert.

In her opening remarks, Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed asked the crowd how they would continue to honor the life and legacy of Dr. King after the holiday passes.

“How will we thrive, especially during a time of unrest and division?” asked Reed, who is 黑料正能量’s regional advancement director. “How will we thrive when many of us believe that, as a nation, we are not moving in the direction of peace, justice and equality? How will we thrive when old wounds and racist ways of thinking have reared their evil head? I believe Dr. King would say, ‘We thrive when we stand. We thrive when we break the silence. We thrive when we are caught up with what is right and willing to sacrifice for it.'”

In addition to Reed, city council members Chris Jones and Dany Fleming, as well as members of the local press, were in attendance. Read the Daily News-Record‘s front-page coverage of the event . A video recording of Convocation is available to watch on the 黑料正能量 Facebook page .


Solidarity March

A group of about 20 demonstrators during Monday morning’s Solidarity March left an impression on the snow-covered campus 鈥 in more ways than one 鈥 as they looped around the University Commons track and marched across the grounds to Lehman Auditorium. Carrying posters reading “Keep marching,” “My hope is Black students will thrive on campus 鈥 not just survive” and “Free! At last!” the marchers reflected on the sacrifices made during the Civil Rights Movement and called for further work to promote racial equity.


Speak Out

At Speak Out, an open mic-styled event that offered an opportunity to share thoughts and feelings about the day, participants recited poems and read from speeches given by Martin Luther King Jr.

黑料正能量 junior Mikayla Pettus (pictured in the top photo) delivered a riveting performance about having a mixed-race identity. As she simulated herself getting ready for the day, putting on makeup and getting her hair ready, a recording of some of the offensive things people might say to someone who is mixed-race played over the speakers. A video recording of Speak Out is available to watch on the 黑料正能量 Facebook page .


‘Black & 25 in America’

Playwright and actor Jeremy Gillett performed his one-man show, Black & 25 in America, at Lehman on Monday. The play features five different characters in a series of vignettes about the lives of young Black people in America. Gillett effortlessly transformed into each character, adopting the mannerisms and colloquialisms of five starkly different identities, including a high school football star trapped in a house of crack cocaine dealers, a “brown kid from the suburbs” who resembled Theo Huxtable, and a gay Black man struggling with his sexual orientation.

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MLK Jr. Celebration returns to 黑料正能量 on Jan. 13-15 /now/news/2024/mlk-jr-celebration-returns-to-emu-on-jan-13-15/ Thu, 04 Jan 2024 19:00:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=55384 A gospel choir concert, a one-man show and a pair of movie screenings will headline a three-day slate of events for 黑料正能量鈥檚 annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration this month. 

The celebration, held on the Harrisonburg, Virginia, campus from Saturday, Jan. 13, to Monday, Jan. 15, is themed 鈥淩emember, Celebrate, Thrive.鈥

鈥淲e need to remember that a lot of people are standing on the shoulders of giants who came before us during the Civil Rights Movement,鈥 said Celeste Thomas, director of multicultural student services at 黑料正能量 and chair of the committee planning the celebration. 鈥淲e have to remember their sacrifice and all their hard work, but we also have to celebrate the accomplishments that came out of that. So, we celebrate what has been achieved and then stand on those shoulders so we can thrive as a community.鈥

A wide range of activities and events will honor the iconic civil rights leader:

Saturday, Jan. 13

11 a.m.-2 p.m. 鈥 Northeast Neighborhood tour: Monica Robinson, executive director of the Shenandoah Valley Black Heritage Project, will lead a tour of the Northeast Neighborhood, a historic community built by and for African-Americans in Harrisonburg following the Civil War. 

Stops along the tour include the Bethel AME Church, with information about the neighboring Dallard-Newman House, and discussions and lunch provided at the Lucy F. Simms Continuing Education Center. Rides from 黑料正能量 will depart from the Black Lives Matter mural in front of the University Commons at 10:30 a.m. Registration is required to attend the tour, and is available online at emu.edu/mlk.

Sunday, Jan. 14

6 p.m. 鈥 Screening of Rustin: A biopic of Bayard Rustin, adviser to MLK and chief organizer of the 1963 March on Washington, will be shown in the MainStage Theater on Sunday evening. The film, released in November, stars actor Colman Domingo as the title character and Chris Rock as activist Roy Wilkins. Rustin faced struggles not only because of his race, but also his sexuality as an openly gay Black man. 

鈥淭he Civil Rights Movement was a diverse movement of people from all spectrums of ethnicity, religion and sexuality,鈥 Thomas said. 

A talk-back session after the screening will discuss the film (runtime: one hour, 46 minutes; rating: PG-13) and answer questions. 

Monday, Jan. 15

A solidarity march during the 2023 Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration.

9:15 a.m. 鈥 Solidarity March: A silent march will proceed from the BLM mural outside University Commons to Lehman Auditorium to kick off Martin Luther King Jr. Day. 

鈥淢arches were what happened throughout the Movement,鈥 Thomas said. 鈥淵ou had the March on Washington, the march between Selma and Montgomery, you had marches in Memphis, to show solidarity.鈥 

Students are invited to create posters in the Student Life office on Sunday night to display during the march.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a silent march, so that people are concentrating and reflecting on the movement and how it has supported them and how it affects them today,鈥 Thomas said. 

9:30 a.m. 鈥 Speak Out: Following the march, 黑料正能量 students, faculty and staff and other community members are encouraged to share their thoughts, feelings, music, poetry and anything else supporting the celebration鈥檚 theme at Lehman Auditorium. 

鈥淧eople will have an opportunity to come to the microphone and share in whichever way they want to share,鈥 Thomas said. 

The event will wrap up with a preselected student monologue.

Jeremy Gillett

10 a.m. 鈥 Black & 25 in America: Playwright and actor Jeremy Gillett will perform his one-man show, Black & 25 in America, at Lehman Auditorium. The Kentucky native portrays five different characters in a series of vignettes about the lives of young Black people in America that explores the issues of race, class, gender and identity. 

A talk-back session will offer audience members a chance to engage with him after the performance. 

12:30 p.m. 鈥 Lunch at Northlawn Cafeteria: A special soul food-inspired menu will be served at the dining hall. 鈥淚 want to give credit to Dining Services, Pioneer College Caterers, and to Food Service Director Shannon Grinnan for working with us on that special menu for the day,鈥 Thomas said. Regular dining charges will apply for the lunch. 

The 黑料正能量 Chamber Singers perform with the VUU Gospel Choir in Richmond.

2 p.m. 鈥 Convocation featuring the VUU Gospel Choir: Hailing from Richmond, the Virginia Union University Gospel Choir will perform at Lehman Auditorium. In October, the historically Black university invited the 黑料正能量 Chamber Singers to perform on its stage with them and Grammy Award-winning artist Hezekiah Walker during a live recording. You can read more about the partnership between the two schools here. 

黑料正能量 Music Program Director David Berry will open Convocation with a medley, followed by remarks from 黑料正能量 President Susan Schultz Huxman, Thomas and Harrisonburg Mayor Deanna Reed. After a series of songs from the VUU Gospel Choir, the 黑料正能量 Chamber Singers will join them for a performance of I Need You to Survive.

Those attending Convocation are asked to bring a nonperishable food item to donate for the food drive.

7 p.m. 鈥 There is a Field screening: A showing of the movie There is a Field inside the old Common Grounds space will round off the MLK Jr. Celebration on Monday evening. The movie mirrors the struggles of Palestinian activists in Israel with members of Black communities in the U.S. It will be followed by a talk-back session, cosponsored by Tim Seidel, Trina Nussbaum and the Center for Interfaith Engagement. This event has been postponed due to inclement weather

All events, other than the lunch on Monday, are free to attend. For more information about the performers and events, visit emu.edu/mlk

Thomas credited the 黑料正能量 Black Student Alliance and Tyler Goss, director for student engagement and leadership development, for their help.

鈥淚 think, if people come out,” Thomas said, “they鈥檒l learn something not only about other people, but also about themselves.”

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MLK Day 2020 at 黑料正能量 /now/news/2020/mlk-day-2020-at-emu/ Mon, 13 Jan 2020 19:03:38 +0000 /now/news/?p=44552 黑料正能量 will observe Martin Luther King Jr. Day Jan. 19-20, 2020, with a range of events on campus, in the Harrisonburg community, and in Washington, D.C. 

View all events on the 黑料正能量 website.

This is the second year that classes have been cancelled and participation encouraged in a variety of activities, including a long-standing tradition of joining a Sunday worship service in one of the Northeast Neighborhood churches with state senator Jennifer McClellan (D-Richmond) at the Lucy Simms Community Center, a luncheon at John Wesley United Methodist Church, as well as a barbershop talk in The Royal Treatment student lounge hosted by local barber Tyrone Sprague.听

Many students participate in a day trip to Washington D.C. led by Kimberly Schmidt, co-director of the Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center. The tour includes participation in the MLK Day parade with Community of Hope nonprofit in the African American community of Anacostia and  a visit to the Martin Luther King, Jr. monument.

Several trainings highlight themes of inclusivity, including diversity awareness with Marvin Worthy of Worthy Consulting & Training and SafeZone trainings for LGBTQIA+ students, committed allies, faculty and staff.

Professor Mark Sawin also offers a lecture on 鈥淩emembering the Confederacy: A Monumental Debate鈥 at 1:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. in Common Grounds.

Professor Jalane Schmidt

Keynote and workshops with U.Va. professor Jalane Schmidt

Among other highlights on campus, Professor Jalane Schmidt provides a keynote address at the Monday convocation and later that day, leads a two-part training on campus activism. A professor of religious studies at the University of Virginia and an organizer with the Charlottesville chapter of Black Lives Matter, she helped to organize counter protests against white supremacy groups during the in August 2017. 

Schmidt leads walking tours of Charlottesville鈥檚 downtown Confederate monuments, and helped plan and lead the city鈥檚 first Liberation and Freedom Day in 2019, which commemorated the 14,000 enslaved residents of Charlottesville and Albemarle County who were emancipated on March 3, 1865, when Union troops arrived. Last year, Schmidt assisted in memorializing Charlottesville resident John Henry James, who was lynched in 1898. 

鈥淗istory belongs to everyone, not just scholars,鈥 Schmidt wrote in a (ACLU). The ACLU represented Schmidt when she was by one of the plaintiffs who had originally sued to prevent the removal of Charlottesville鈥檚 Confederate monuments. 

鈥淢arginalized narratives of vulnerable groups of our community must be included in our collective story in order to inform our efforts to make changes in the present and to promote a more just and equitable future.鈥

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