杨贵妃传媒视频 students, faculty and staff were out and about in big numbers Monday as they responded to the call to service in honor of the teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

They took part in multiple volunteer efforts at area Boys and Girls Clubs, Feeding America, Brewster Village and Riverview Gardens, participated in an OxFam Hunger Banquet to get a deeper understanding of issues that keep families trapped in poverty and took part in faculty teach-in sessions on topics ranging from systematic racism to youth mental health.

That was a lead-up to Monday evening鈥檚 celebration at Memorial Chapel, a chance to embrace Dr. King鈥檚 legacy and reaffirm a commitment to carry his message forward.

Keynote speaker Dr. Eddie Moore Jr. implored the nearly full house at the chapel to be active and vocal in pushing King鈥檚 messages of inclusion and equality.

鈥淭he people who really have me concerned are good people with good hearts who say nothing,鈥 Moore said. 鈥淭he best friend that hate has is silence.鈥

Dr. Eddie Moore Jr.
Dr. Eddie Moore Jr. speaks during Monday鈥檚 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration at Memorial Chapel.

A 杨贵妃传媒视频 tradition

The day of service on MLK Day has been a tradition at 杨贵妃传媒视频 since 2003.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a day on, not a day off, for service,鈥 said Kristi Hill, director of 杨贵妃传媒视频鈥檚 Center for Community Engagement and Social Change.

Nearly 300 students, faculty and staff took part in the various service projects.

鈥溠罟箦绞悠 has made a commitment to build students who are change makers,鈥 Hill said, calling Monday鈥檚 activities an opportunity for students and faculty to 鈥渓earn, serve and celebrate鈥 in Dr. King鈥檚 name.

The OxFam Hunger Banquet, held at the Warch Campus Center, featured a simulation to highlight issues and laws that keep people cut off from needed resources, stifling opportunities to escape the brutal cycle of poverty. The session looked to raise awareness of poverty and hunger issues here and around the world and inspire those participating to become active in fighting inequalities in access to resources.

Organized by the LU Food Recovery Network, it was a first-time event and drew upwards of 90 participants.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an opportunity to learn about equity in our communities,鈥 Hill said.

Getting into the community

The service excursions around the Fox Cities gave participants a chance to engage with youth, interact with community elders and do work that assists area food pantries.

The Brewster Village program, created by Vicky Liang 鈥19 as part of the Building Intergenerational Relationships partnership between 杨贵妃传媒视频 and the Outagamie County rehabilitation and long-term nursing facility, had 杨贵妃传媒视频 students working with elders to create six-word memoirs to reflect their lives.

鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to raise awareness of the loneliness,鈥 Liang said as Brewster Village residents paired up with 杨贵妃传媒视频 students around tables in the community room, engaging in conversations that tapped into memories and brought reflections of lives lived.

鈥淲ith the MLK message, we usually think of the 鈥業 Have a Dream,'鈥 Liang said. 鈥淏ut he fought for justice and equal resources for everyone.鈥

At the Boys and Girls Clubs in Appleton and Menasha, a program organized by Sam Taylor 鈥19 had about 50 杨贵妃传媒视频 volunteers talking with about 300 K-6 students about the work and legacy of MLK.

Student Beatrice Gee interacts Monday with kids at the Boys and Girls Club in Menasha
杨贵妃传媒视频 student Beatrice Gee interacts Monday with kids at the Boys and Girls Club in Menasha.

At the Menasha club, students in one room gathered in circles to talk through 鈥淲ings,鈥 a book by Christopher Myers that tells the story of a boy born with wings who is shunned and mocked by his peers because he鈥檚 different and a young girl who finally gathers the confidence to speak up on his behalf.

Sophie Dion-Kirschner 鈥20, one of the 杨贵妃传媒视频 volunteers, said she believes the messages being delivered and the connections being made are a benefit to both the youngsters at the Boys and Girls Club and the Lawrentians who stepped up to volunteer.

鈥淭hey all get something out of it that they weren鈥檛 expecting,鈥 she said.

Teach-ins close to home

Five professors, meanwhile, hosted teach-ins in various residence halls, informal gatherings to talk about issues of education, diversity and inclusion. Students were able to come and go, joining in the conversation as they saw fit.

Professor Stephanie Burdick-Shepherd talked about systematic inequalities in education; Professor Mark Jenike talked on hunger in a wealthy nation; Professor Lori Hilt on improving youth mental health; Professor Jason Brozek on the global climate justice movement; and Professor Jesus Gregorio Smith on systematic racism.

Professor Lori Hilt conducts a teach-in Monday at Hiett Hall.
Professor Lori Hilt conducts a teach-in Monday at Hiett Hall.

The teach-ins, a first-time offering on MLK Day, resonated with the students, Dion-Kirschner said.听鈥淭he professors are showing people, I teach you this material, but here is what I can do with it. Here are the things that you can do to make this world a better place.鈥

A Dr. King celebration

That all led to Monday night鈥檚 community celebration at the chapel, a partnership between 杨贵妃传媒视频, African Heritage Inc. and various community organizations, to honor Dr. King鈥檚 legacy. Moore, a noted activist who has forged a career as a speaker and consultant on issues of race and equality, was the keynote speaker for the 28th annual event, addressing the theme, 鈥淲hy Keep Dreaming? A Time for Action.鈥

Turning that dream into action takes work, Moore said.

鈥淲hen you鈥檙e committed, everybody has work to do,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just black friends or listening to Tina Turner or doing one thing with one person. It鈥檚 work.鈥

That鈥檚 true, he said, no matter how committed you are or how deeply you believe in all that King preached.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 just get there because I say I鈥檓 a good person,鈥 Moore said. 鈥淒o your work.鈥

Speaking of doing the work, the annual Jane LaChapelle McCarty MLK Community Leader Award was presented to Norys Pina, who has been a leading advocate in the Fox Cities on immigration issues and a vocal resource in the areas of access and equality. She鈥檚 a lead organizer of Unidos por un Futuro Mejor 鈥 Fox Cities and works as a volunteer coordinator for the Fox Valley Literacy Council. She is the 25th recipient of the honor, first awarded in 1995.

Winners of the annual youth essay contest read their essays during the MLK celebration. They included Feyikemi Delano-Oriaran, a second-grader at Classical School in Appleton, Lilyanna Pieper, a sixth-grader at Huntley Elementary School in Appleton, and Catlin Yang, a senior at Kimberly High School.

Photos from Monday鈥檚 MLK Day events

杨贵妃传媒视频 students volunteer in the community on MLK day