Monday is Martin Luther King, Jr. day, honoring the most famous figure from the battle for racial equality in the 1950s and 60s in the United States.
Central College students and faculty will honor the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr.’s life and work with activities this week. King visited campus in March of 1967, an important milestone in the history of the campus.
Mary Lubbers Montgomery is the daughter of then-Central President Arend “Don” Lubbers, who invited King to campus. Montgomery was eight years old at the time.
“I remember waiting impatiently for him to arrive at our home, and when he finally arrived, of course my brothers and I were instructed to use our manners and how to act and how to introduce yourself to someone or greet someone,” Montgomery says. “So I stuck out my hand as Dr. King came through the door, and I was mesmerized, of course, seeing him.”
Martin Luther King Jr. Day at Central College will feature artist and writer Bettina Judd, plus 15 concurrent academic sessions and five service projects.
“We will honor the Martin Luther King, Jr., legacy of equity, justice and peace at Central with a full day of learning and service activities to bring students and community members together,” says Paulina Mena, faculty fellow for diversity and inclusion and associate professor of biology.
Central’s MLK Day activities begin with a general session in Douwstra Auditorium on Central’s campus, open to the public. Quinn Deahl, Class of 2023 and student body president, will welcome all to the MLK Day program. Winona Van Berkum, Class of 2026, will give a land acknowledgment, which recognize Indigenous Peoples who are the original stewards of the lands on which we now live.
This will be followed by an artistic performance: “Persevere,” a visual and musical collaboration by Stan Dahl, senior lecturer of music, and Mat Kelly, professor of art.
Judd, associate professor of gender, women and sexuality studies at the University of Washington, will give the keynote address, “The Meaning of Rage x The Practice of Love.” Judd is an interdisciplinary writer, artist and performer whose research focuses on Black women’s creative production and the use of visual art, literature and music to develop feminist thought. She will give a keynote address to start the day and a poetry reading at the end of the day.
Mena received funding from Central’s new Paul Poppen Fund for Social Justice Programs endowment to bring Judd to campus. The endowment supports research, scholarship, education and remedial activities at Central while encouraging student involvement in issues of social justice. Funding was also provided through the Worstell Faculty Development Fund on the Impact of Gender Equity.
“The faculty have created powerful presentations from a spectrum of perspectives,” Mena says. “Everyone will find a topic of interest and value.”
A sampling of academic programs includes:
– American Health Care: Injustice and Inequities, by Ellie Du Pre, professor of biology.
– “Wakanda Forever” and the Impact of its Black and Latinx Representation, by Oscar Reynaga, senior lecturer of Spanish.
– Traditional Plant Uses: Cultural Heritage or Profit Booster, by Paul Weihe, associate professor of biology.
– Data Ethics: Racial Bias in Everyday Algorithms, by Russ Goodman, professor of mathematics.
– MLK, Civil Rights and the Vietnam War, by Jim Zaffiro, professor of political science.
– Racial Disparity in Police Stops: The Question, the Evidence and the Controversy, by Tuan Nguyen, assistant professor of economics.
Five projects will be offered throughout the day for students to demonstrate the significance of working together to serve others.
MLK Day on campus will conclude with a poetry reading by Judd. Her poems and essays have appeared in Feminist Studies, Women’s Studies Quarterly, Torch, Mythium, Meridians and other journals and anthologies. Her collection of poems titled “Patient,” tackles the history of medical experimentation on and the display of Black women. “Patient” won the Black Lawrence Press Hudson Book Prize after its release in November 2014. As a performer, Judd has been invited to present before audiences within the United States and internationally.
Martin Luther King, Jr., addressed an audience of 1,300 in the college gymnasium on March 22, 1967, just over a year before his assassination.