UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — On Jan. 15, Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, the Forum on Black Affairs (FOBA) and Penn State World Campus partnered to host the 46th annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Celebration, “Project 1972: A Conversation with our Elders.”
Held virtually this year due to the pandemic, the event annually brings together hundreds of Penn State and State College community members to commemorate the Civil Rights leader’s life and legacy, through presentations, performances and scholarship awards.
This year’s event, emceed by Stephanie Danette Preston, associate dean for graduate educational equity, provided a meaningful opportunity for the community to hear the lived, historical experiences of Black Penn State students, reflect on the importance of King’s work, and understand how his words and actions continue to resonate today.
In her welcoming remarks, Renata Engel, vice provost for Online Education, talked about King’s speech on Jan. 21, 1965, when he spoke to a crowd of 9,000 people at Rec Hall on the University Park campus. In his speech, King spoke about the past and the present, and shared a vision for the future.
“I still have faith in America, and I have still have the faith to believe that we will solve this problem,” said King. “We have the resources in this nation to solve it and I believe that gradually we are gaining the will to solve it, and that is developing a coalition of conscience on the question of racial injustice, and I would hope that in the days ahead, the forces of goodwill will work even harder in order to go this additional distance in order to make the brotherhood of man a reality all over America.”
Engel continued, “As I think about his words in today’s context, I’m reminded that we cannot foresee the future. We don’t know what next year will bring, but we can learn from the past, if we are open to do so; and our actions in the present can be with an eye toward what we want in the future. I know that this session tonight is going to be filled with opportunities to learn, and I know we will have opportunities to think about those things and bring them with us into the future."