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     BOSTON
    - Friday, January 15, 2021 - Mayor
    Martin J. Walsh today announced that, in partnership with Boston
    University, the City of Boston will present "A Day of Celebration in Honor of Rev. Dr.
    Martin Luther King, Jr"
    on Monday, January 18, 2021 at 12:00 p.m. The event will be live
    streamed on both boston.gov and bu.edu, as well as on the City of Boston's
    cable network (Xfinity: channel 24, RCN: channel 13, and Fios: channel 962.) 
    "Commemorating the life and legacy of Rev.
    Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is pivotal to remembering the long history of
    racial injustice in our country, especially as we strive to achieve equity
    for all," said Mayor Walsh. "Thank you to Boston University and
    the New England Conservatory for your partnership in celebrating Dr. King's
    life and for adapting our annual event to allow us to safely honor this
    day. I'm proud to invite all Bostonians to mark this important day with
    us." 
  
    
    This
    year, the City of Boston and Boston University welcome New England
    Conservatory as a partner in its celebration of the life and legacy of Dr.
    King. This year's program will spotlight Coretta Scott King, who graduated
    from New England Conservatory in 1954, and it will feature the works of
    James Baldwin, who wrote of the resistance movements, dissent and humanity
    of young people. The event will feature remarks from Mayor Martin J. Walsh,
    BU President Robert A. Brown and Karen Holmes Ward, and performances by the
    New England Conservatory.  The event culminates with featured speakers
    Eddie S. Glaude, the James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor
    and chair of the Department of African American Studies at Princeton
    University and Ibram X. Kendi, the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the
    Humanities at Boston University and Director and Founder of the BU Center
    for Antiracist Research. 
    "On
    Monday we celebrate Dr. King's legacy and honor his sacrifice. At Boston
    University we are mindful that as we emerge from COVID-which has affected
    African-American and Hispanic members of our communities far more than
    others-we will not, and should not, revert to the old normal," said
    Boston University President Robert A. Brown. "We must aim to establish
    new and better conditions and protections for everyone and fight against
    both prejudice and complacency." 
    "We count it a great privilege to call
    Coretta Scott King an alumna of NEC, and are thrilled to join Boston
    University and the City of Boston in honouring the profound work and
    contributions of Dr. and Mrs. King," said NEC President Andrea Kalyn. "As
    individuals and as a couple, the Kings lived their commitment to the
    principles of freedom, equity, and justice, and their belief in the very
    concept of humanity." 
    In previous years, leaders such as U.S.
    Representative Ayanna Pressley, Beverly Morgan-Welch, Sonia Sanchez, Dr.
    Alvin Poussaint, Ernest Green of the Little Rock Nine, Judy Richardson of
    Eyes on the Prize, and civil rights activist and filmmaker Topper Carew
    served as keynote speakers. Governor Deval Patrick, Chief Justice Roderick
    Ireland, Boston Poet Laureates Sam Cornish and Danielle Legros Georges,
    former Orthopaedic Surgeon-in-Chief at Beth Israel Hospital Dr. Augustus
    White, and WGBH Radio host Eric Jackson are among those who have served as
    readers in previous years.
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