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Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration

Medical School Dean reflects on progress toward racial equality, urges students to act

Christopher Duray

Issue date: 1/20/09 Section: News
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Dr. Cato Laurencin, UConn's vice president for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine, gives the keynote speech at a Martin Luther King Jr. Day ceremony Monday night.
Media Credit: Erin Odell
Dr. Cato Laurencin, UConn's vice president for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine, gives the keynote speech at a Martin Luther King Jr. Day ceremony Monday night.

With the inauguration of America's first black president looming over the country, students nearly filled the Student Union Theater Monday night to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. Day in a ceremony that venerated the civil rights activist through speeches and the singing of an elementary school choir, and did not hesitate to praise President-elect Barack Obama.

The keynote speaker of the event was Dr. Cato Laurencin, UConn's vice president for health affairs and dean of the School of Medicine. Event organizer and African American Cultural Center Director Willena Kimpson Price met him at a lunch with UConn President Michael Hogan, and was impressed by his grasp of civil rights issues and personal struggle with racism, and so he was asked to speak, she said.

Laurencin's speech was entitled Have We Come to the Place for Which Our Fathers Sighed? and it questioned the state of race relations in America by reminding students that the election of the first black president would not solve racism.

Despite the social progress, Laurencin was quick to point out that the average black male in America has a lifespan seven years shorter than his white counterpart, and is generally more susceptible to - and less likely to survive - diseases like prostate cancer and AIDS.

Laurencin also pointed out that a larger percentage of prisoners are black than white, creating a debilitating "prison industrial complex."

He then conceded that today's social problems do not negate the great progress the country has made in race relations.

"If [Martin Luther King Jr.] were here today, he would say that, despite our problems, our sense of community and spirituality still exist," Laurencin said. "With those we may still win the day."

He then recalled the progress made so far, citing progressive black citizens like activist Paul Robeson and astronaut May Jameson, and the stark difference from his childhood, spent growing up in the '60s during the height of 20th century American racism. Laurencin related a story where his family, on a road trip, was forced to drive without stopping once for fear of being denied service.
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Oh Tham Eng

posted 1/20/09 @ 11:14 AM EST

Hi Americans!

Best wishes from my God-beloved country of Singapore!

The following is the type of inaugural speech I have drafted which I hope President Obama could deliver. (Continued…)

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