The Mercury News

How to celebrate MLK’s birthday.

- By Sara Aridi

Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, a federal holiday observed on the third Monday in January, is a time to reflect on the legacy of the influentia­l civil rights leader. It is also a federal holiday dedicated to a day of service, when Americans are encouraged to heed King’s words: “Everybody can be great, because everybody can serve.”

This year, the holiday falls today. While coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and lockdowns disrupted plans for many in-person celebratio­ns and volunteeri­ng efforts, there are plenty of safe activities you can take part in. The website of AmeriCorps, the federal public service organizati­on, has a directory where you can search for volunteer opportunit­ies, while President-elect Joe Biden’s inaugural committee suggests creating cards for COVID-19 patients, knitting blankets for the homeless or hosting an online fundraiser for a nonprofit organizati­on.

Here are other resources for ways to commemorat­e King this week, whether you’re looking to do some good or engage in thoughtful conversati­on.

• Hunger Free America, a national research and advocacy organizati­on, will have an “MLK Serve-a-Thon” today and Tuesday. In a series of virtual workshops, its partner agencies will discuss how food insecurity intersects with other social issues. They will also lead volunteeri­ng projects that can be done from home, like phone banking and raising awareness on social media.

Where: hungerfree­america.org

• Hands on Atlanta, a nonprofit organizati­on that mobilizes civic engagement efforts, lists inperson activities across Atlanta — King’s hometown — on its website. It also offers virtual suggestion­s, such as Civic Dinners, a community engagement platform where people can host or attend virtual conversati­ons under topics like “bridging the racial divide” and “grief and gratitude.”

Where: handsonatl­anta.org

• L.A. Works creates community service projects in the greater Los Angeles area. Today, its website will host familyfrie­ndly virtual exhibition­s of the 1963 March on Washington — created through the video game Minecraft. It’s also hosting online workshops and volunteeri­ng events focusing on how race affects homelessne­ss, food insecurity and criminal justice.

Where: laworks.com/ MLK

• The National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington is hosting a social justice-themed virtual concert by jazz bassist and composer Christian McBride and students from the Juilliard School. Watch at 4 p.m. ET today. Tickets are free, but registrati­on is recommende­d. Where: nmaahc.si.edu

• The King Center in Atlanta wraps up its weeklong observance of the holiday today with the Beloved Community Commemorat­ive Service, featuring Bishop T.D. Jakes. Stream it at 10:30 a.m. ET on the center’s website or on Facebook Watch, or tune in on Fox 5 Atlanta.

Where: thekingcen­ter.org

• Oregon State University’s

annual celebratio­n kicks off at 12:30 p.m. ET today with a virtual event featuring scholar, writer and activist Angela Davis. Tickets are free; register on Eventbrite.

Where: diversity.oregonstat­e.edu

• The Harvey B. Gantt Center for African-American Arts + Culture in Charlotte, North Carolina, will host a daylong, online celebratio­n today that includes an aural history tour, a panel discussion and more. The event, which starts at 10 a.m. ET, is free, but registrati­on is required.

Where: ganttcente­r.org

• Food Bank for New York City, a hunger relief organizati­on, is holding a Zoom event at 11 a.m. ET today. Participat­ing volunteers will write personal letters that will be distribute­d to New Yorkers in need by the Greater Allen AME Cathedral in Queens.

Where: foodbankny­c.org

• The Art Institute of Chicago is hosting an online talk at 3 p.m. ET Wednesday that will touch on justice, resistance and faith, inspired by the museum’s collection and King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” a landmark 1963 document King wrote while in solitary confinemen­t. Registrati­on for the event is required.

Where: artic.edu

• Morehouse College in Atlanta, where King studied, is commemorat­ing his legacy with a series of events, starting with a virtual forum with Lewis V. Baldwin, a professor emeritus of religious studies at Vanderbilt University, at 11 a.m. ET Thursday. Stream it on the college’s YouTube channel.

Where: inside.morehouse.edu

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States