Centre Daily Times

LEAVING A LEGACY

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“I was married to Martin but I was even more married to the Movement” — Coretta Scott King

Fifty-six years ago while Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King was organizing support for the sanitation workers in Memphis, he was assassinat­ed. It changed the world. His wife, Coretta, had a longer and intense commitment to the human rights movement. She was responsibl­e for developing the King Center in Atlanta, the Poor

People’s Campaign and making MLK Day a national holiday. She was in the leadership of the antiaparth­eid struggle, the anti-Vietnam War movement and the struggle for equal rights for the LGBTQ+ community. When she died in 2006 four presidents and a future president (Obama) attended her funeral.

Tamira Walker recently spoke to a packed house about Coretta’s leadership at an annual MLK Jr. Commemorat­ion. The program “Keeping The Movement in Motion,” was organized and emceed by Carmin Wong, a member of the State College Borough’s Racial Equity Advisory Commission, and was led and spirituall­y uplifted by grad student poets, musicians and scholars: Kesla Elmore, Gabriel Pulido, Pheolyn Allen, Jaden Adkins, Sean Hambrick, and a keynote by Morgan Robinson.

Also in Centre County, the Restorativ­e Justice Initiative and the Student Restorativ­e Justice Initiative presented workshops during “Reentry Reimagined Summit,” a conference that addressed educationa­l empowermen­t for justice-impacted communitie­s. Community activist Irvin Moore was the keynote speaker.

And congrats to Lady Lion Makenna Marisa for being selected to play in the Women’s College All Star Game. She was also named to the Big Ten’s second team.

WPSU’s Multicultu­ral

Children’s Festival was held Saturday at the State College Area High School. Fifteen countries had tables, which delightful­ly served 1,200 people, mostly children.

The Islamic Society of Central PA (ISCP) invited community officials, leaders, Penn State students and faculty to the State College Municipal Building to share Iftar, a sacred communal meal that breaks the daily Ramadan fast. Mayor Ezra Nanes presented a mayoral proclamati­on celebratin­g Ramadan. Rami Alhellu, president of the ISCP, and others shared welcome and informativ­e remarks.

This past week the McCourtney Institute for Democracy hosted David Hogg, activist and survivor of the Parkland school massacre. The March For Our Lives co-founder spoke before a couple hundred people at the HUB-Robeson Center. Hogg, a gun control activist, was named one of Time Magazine’s most influentia­l people of 2018. A recent Harvard

University graduate, his efforts include trying to inspire young people to run for office. He shared the experience of helping March for our Lives member Maxwell Frost become the youngest member of Congress.

Our dear friend and colleague, Louis Gossett Jr., recently joined the ancestors. He was the first African American man to be awarded an Academy Award for Supporting Actor for his role in “An Officer and a Gentleman.” He was known for his work in the great American play, “Raisin in the Sun” and his portrayal of Chicken George in the iconic historic TV series “Roots.” Lou was great not only for what he did on the stage and screen, but for his philanthro­pic work off it.

I first got to know him in 1986. I was working with the Office of Black Catholics in the New York Archdioces­e. We collaborat­ed on a fundraisin­g effort to rebuild Chicago’s Holy

Angels Church, which had been totaled by a major fire. Father George Clement was the pastor and my personal mentor. He was the first Catholic priest to receive Papal approval to officially adopt children. Eschewing financial support from the diocese, he committed the parish and community to raise the money to build a new church. Lou had played the lead role in the film “The Father Clements Story.” Leveraging Lou’s notoriety and Clements’ “fame” we held benefit showings of the film. Lou made guest appearance­s. We raised the millions required to rebuild Holy Angels, “the Church of 21st Century.”

Goodbye and good night, my brother. I know that flights of angels, holy angels, will sing thee to thy rest.

Charles Dumas is a lifetime political activist, and professor emeritus from Penn State. He lives with his partner and wife of 50 years in State College.

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