Yale events to honor life and legacy of Martin Luther King Jr.

January 9, 2015
By Michael Morand
 

Yale University will honor the life and legacy of the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. with a series of events organized under the theme “No Work is Insignificant”: Moving Forward through Service, Scholarship, and Solidarity, beginning on Sunday, Jan. 18 and continuing through Jan. 27.

Highlights include a speech by Johnnetta Cole, former president of two historically black colleges, on Jan. 18, the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History’s annual two-day King holiday celebration Jan. 18 and 19, a panel discussion on mass incarceration in America on Jan. 21, and a special screening of the film “Selma” on Jan. 24.

Yale’s King celebrations are open to all on campus and throughout the New Haven community at no charge.

Peabody Museum celebration

The Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, 170 Whitney Ave., will hold its “19th Annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Legacy of Environmental and Social Justice” event on Sunday, Jan. 18 from noon to 4 p.m. and on Monday, Jan. 19 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission to the museum is free on both days.

The two-day event will include musical and dance performances, storytelling, and educational activities for visitors of all ages, as well as a Teen Summit. The storytelling sessions will be held in conjunction with the New Haven Museum and take place on Monday, Jan. 19, at 114 Whitney Ave. Also on Monday, the Peabody will host its annual “Zannette Lewis Environmental and Social Justice Community Open Mic and Poetry Slam,” an opportunity for participants to share their original poetry or rap and to discuss issues of environmental and social justice. The full schedule of festival events, including registration information and links for the Teen Summit and the poetry slam, is available here at the Yale Peabody Museum’s website

Lecture by Johnnetta Cole

Johnnetta Cole

On Sunday, Jan. 18, all are invited to hear Johnnetta B. Cole, director of the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, give an address at Battell Chapel, corner of Elm and College streets, beginning at 6 p.m. Her speech, together with many other campus-wide events, is organized by the university’s Martin Luther King (MLK) Committee, led by the Afro-American Cultural Center at Yale and including representatives from a wide range of Yale departments and groups.

Cole is the only person to have served as president of two historically black colleges for women in the United States: Spelman College and Bennett College for Women. She did her undergraduate studies at Fisk University and Oberlin College and earned her Ph.D. in anthropology from Northwestern University, where her work focused on African studies.  The first African-American woman to serve as Spelman’s president, Cole is also professor emerita of Emory University, where she was the Presidential Distinguished Professor of Anthropology, Women’s Studies, and African-American Studies.

Other campus and city events

Additional events on campus and in the community to honor King include the following (please note, information about other events is still coming in; return to this page for updates as the holiday celebrations approach):

  • Thursday, Jan. 15: Shiloh Missionary Baptist, 100 Lawrence St., will hold its 45th Annual “Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Love March” beginning at 10:45 a.m. The church, pastored by the Reverend Kennedy D. Hampton Sr. ’09 M.Div., has held a celebration on King’s actual birthday every year since 1970.
  • Monday, Jan. 19: Dwight Hall at Yale will sponsor “A Day of Service” from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
  • Monday, Jan. 19: The Wexler-Grant Community School, 55 Foote St., will host its annual MLKconference, on the theme “All Voices Should Be Heard,” from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. The event is sponsored by the Theta Epsilon Omega Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc.
  • Tuesday, Jan. 20: The Afro-American Cultural Center, 211 Park St., will host a Martin Luther King Jr. exhibition by the Black Student Alliance at Yale; time to be announced.
  • Wednesday, Jan. 21: A panel discussion on “Mass Incarceration and Minority Mobilization” will be held in Sudler Hall at William L. Harkness Hall (WLH), 100 Wall St., beginning at 6 p.m.; it will feature faculty from the Yale Law School and Department of African American Studies, police officers, and other community members.
  • Saturday, Jan. 24: There will be a screening of “Selma” at the Whitney Humanities Center, 53 Wall St., at 3 p.m., followed by a discussion led by faculty from the Department of African American Studies.
  • Sunday, Jan. 26: The Department of African American Studies will host a teach-in from 7 to 9 p.m.; location and other details to be announced.
  • Monday, Jan. 27: The MLK Committee will host a performing arts showcase with campus cultural groups at Sudler Hall in WLH from 7 to 9:30 p.m.

The celebration of King’s work has a long tradition at Yale. King visited the university three times. He spoke about the future of integration and the civil rights movement before a full house in Woolsey Hall on Jan. 14, 1959 at the invitation of the Undergraduate Lecture Committee, and he celebrated his 30thbirthday on Jan. 15 that year on campus. (See a video of his talk, below.)  In January 1962, King delivered a sermon in Battell Chapel at the invitation of University Chaplain William Sloane Coffin.

He returned to campus two years later when Yale presented him with an honorary Doctor of Laws degree at the university’s 262nd Commencement exercises on June 15, 1964. The citation read: “As your eloquence has kindled the nation’s sense of outrage, so your steadfast refusal to countenance violence in resistance to injustice has heightened our sense of national shame. When outrage and shame together shall one day have vindicated the promise of legal, social, and economic opportunity for all citizens, the gratitude of peoples everywhere and of generations of Americans yet unborn will echo our admiration.”

Martin Luther King Jr. Speaks at Yale, 1959:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mlm_XjOLkm8

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