Bucknell MLK Week to feature Mayor of Newark, N.J.
LEWISBURG — Bucknell University will honor the life and legacy of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (MLK) during the University’s MLK Week, Jan. 16 through Jan. 27. Through learning, discussion, community engagement and art, the celebration will commemorate King under this year’s theme of “Legacies: Leaving a Path to Follow.”
“We gather to honor Dr. King — not simply as a dreamer — but as an organizer, a prophet and a leader within a vast movement that stood against racism, militarism and poverty and built toward justice, freedom and the beloved community,” says Rev. Kurt Nelson, director, religious & spiritual life and co-chair of Bucknell’s MLK Week committee. “We gather to wonder how each one of us will further that work and forge a path for others to follow.”
Ras J. Baraka — mayor of Newark, N.J., published author and educator — will headline the events during his free, public keynote address on Monday, Jan. 23, at 7 p.m. in Trout Auditorium, Vaughan Literature Building. Baraka has been heralded as a thought leader in urban revitalization for his commitment to reducing crime in Newark, tackling the city’s housing crisis, and developing innovative and community-driven strategies to eliminate income inequality. His progressive agenda has reduced the city’s crime rate to its lowest in five decades, lowered unemployment, returned local control of schools after more than two decades, and addressed affordability while maintaining steady growth.
A faculty discussion about the accomplishments of Amiri Baraka, American writer, poet and playwright — and father of this year’s keynote speaker — will kick off MLK Week public events Tuesday, Jan. 17 at noon in the Elaine Langone Center’s (ELC) Walls Lounge. Participants will discuss Amiri Baraka’s legacy and impact on the Black Arts Movement. The discussion will be led by Bucknell Visiting Professor William Palmer, English — literary studies; Professor Jaye Austin Williams, critical Black studies; and Professor Meenakshi Ponnuswami, English.
A free, public showing of Nevline Nnaji’s film “Reflections Unheard: Black Women in Civil Rights” will take place Friday, Jan. 20, at 4 p.m. in the ELC Gallery Theater. Rev. Karlos Nichols, Rooke Chapel gospel music fellow, will lead a community sing Saturday, Jan. 21, at 1:30 p.m. in Rooke Chapel. MLK Week events will close in the Campus Theatre, 413 Market St., with a showing of Marvel Studios’ “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” Tuesday, Jan. 27, at 8 p.m. Regular admission prices apply to see the sequel to the 2018 “Black Panther” film, which grossed over $1.3 billion worldwide and broke numerous box-office records, becoming the highest-grossing film directed by a Black filmmaker.





