MTSU MLK vigil reflects on legacy, call to 'moral and fair society'

Jan 23, 2019 at 07:00 am by Voice Wire

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MTSU MLK vigil

MTSU junior Jael Ward of Atlanta joined hundreds of other students Monday night in reflecting on the life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

The 90-minute ceremony inside the Student Union featured speakers, music and multimedia in celebration of what would have been the slain civil rights leader's 90th birthday. Ward and fellow sorority sisters of the Eta Psi Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. lead the celebration and candlelight vigil. 

"I thought the vigil was amazing," said Ward, who's majoring in industrial and organizational psychology. "It was very moving and really gave us a representation of his life and his legacy, and how much of an impact he made on our society and the world. 

"But also how much farther we have to (go) still. He did so much for us, but we have to take his legacy and keep going with it." 

While MTSU offices were closed Monday in observance of the federal holiday, the Intercultural and Diversity Affairs Center coordinated the annual vigil that night, featuring a variety of multimedia presentations highlighting key moments during the civil rights era as well as a tribute to King's wife, the late Coretta Scott King. 

In keynote remarks for the occasion, Aaron Treadwell, an assistant professor of history at MTSU and senior pastor at African Methodist Episcopal Church in Nashville, told those in attendance that they shouldn't let life's adversity keep them from pursuing their goals and dreams. 

"Don't let the nightmare in your life — the trial, the tribulation — take you to a hell situation," he said.

Treadwell recounted King facing challenging situations throughout the civil rights movement, but chose to offer his famous "I Have a Dream" speech in Washington, D.C., "even in the midst of America's own nightmare."

"He realized that we can never let fear be the stronghold that takes us to hell," he said. "King projected a joyful dream of an ideologically moral and fair society. 

Treadwell reminded the audience that metaphorical nightmares in life don't last forever, and once awake, "everybody in here has the power to decide what the rest of your life is going to look like."

Before asking the attendees to join him in reciting the True Blue Pledge to conclude the vigil, Dakota Logan, college pastor at the Point Campus Ministry, again challenged those in attendance to make a commitment from getting out of comfort zones and connecting with "people who don't look like you."

"The question is, are you willing? Are you going to be a bridge-builder where there's been division?" he asked. "I challenge you guys this semester … don't just do what's comfortable."

Others participating in the formal program included: AKA member Jada Thomas; Kyla Clark of the Generation of Purpose Gospel Choir; pop duo Carie Ferra and Andrea Seay; and motivational speaker Anthony Burton.

King, who was inspired both by his Christian faith and by civil disobedience tactics employed by Indian leader Mohandas K. Gandhi, led marches and demonstrations that led to the dissolution of legally enforced racial segregation in public accommodations. His work and that of his followers prompted Congress to pass the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

After speaking to sanitation workers who were striking for better wages and working conditions in Memphis, Tennessee, King was assassinated on April 4, 1968, as he stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel. 

On Nov. 21, 1983, President Ronald Reagan signed into law the legislation creating Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a national celebration of King's birthday. King was born Jan. 15, 1929. The holiday is celebrated on the third Monday in January each year. Its first observance was on Jan. 20, 1986. 

Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority was the first Greek-letter organization established by women of color. It was created at Howard University in Washington, D.C., during the 1907-1908 academic year. The Eta Psi chapter has been in existence at MTSU since 1973.

"Our ancestors started a fight for us, but it is up to us to keep that fight going," said BreYhana Johnson, AKA president and co-emcee of the event with AKA vice president Cherilynn Mella. "It's still our job to keep fighting the fight … not as individuals, but as vessels of our ancestors."

For more information about the MLK celebration, contact the Intercultural and Diversity Affairs Center at 615-898-5812 or ida@mtsu.edu.

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