Terrier Volume 81, Number 1 | Page 11

Global Heroes St. Francis College hosted dozens of special guests last school year, many with an international impact. Here are just a few of these global heroes. Jackie Robinson’s Legacy—70 Years after Breaking the Color Barrier St. Francis College Professors Sara Rzeszutek (History), Frank Green (Fine Arts), John Dilyard (management), Emily Horowitz (Sociology), with Provost Timothy Houlihan and Nobel Prize Winner Leymah Gbowee. Leymah Gbowee O C T O B E R 2 5 , 2 0 1 6 — Speaking at the 5th Annual Dr. Francis J. Greene Honors Lecture at St. Francis College, Nobel Peace Prize winner Leymah Gbowee (left) urged people to lay down their misconceptions about others and realize that at the core of most struggles, people are fighting for the same thing; basic human rights. Gbowee, who won the Nobel Prize for helping to end the civil war in Liberia, talked about confronting her own prejudices and the importance of trusting others when fighting for justice. She said without trust between different groups, there won’t be the transformational change that both groups want. “How do you say ’I care for Black Lives Matter but I don’t care for gay and LGBT people.’?” The Honors Lecture was organized by Professor John Dilyard, Director of the Honors Program. It is named for Dr. Francis Greene, who taught at St. Francis College for more than 30 years before retiring as a full-time faculty member. ● A P R I L 5 — St. Francis College hosted Professor of History Joseph Dorinson (LIU) for a talk on the legacy of Jackie Robinson on April 5; part of a borough wide celebration of Robinson hosted with the Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS) and National Grid to commemorate the 70th anniversary of Jackie Robinson’s Brooklyn Dodgers debut on April 15, 1947. On the same day, BHS opened a year-long exhibition titled Until Everyone Has It Made: Jackie Robinson’s Legacy, which tells the story of Robinson as athlete and fighter for equal rights. That exhibit runs through June 2018. In addition, National Grid hosted a pop-up exhibition. St. Francis College students played a big role in the celebration. Students from History Professor Sara Rzeszutek Haviland’s course on protest researched the event that changed baseball. After examining artifacts and other resources at BHS they created the brochure given out at the exhibition. “By integrating America’s national pastime in 1947, Jackie Robinson paved the way for the decades of major civil rights victories that followed,” said Professor Haviland. ●  Video—https://youtu.be/bMqDHIyrFYs  Video—https://vimeo.com/189007198 Bernard Lafayette F E B R U A R Y 2 3 — From original Freedom Rider with now Congressman John Lewis, to a close confidant and organizer with Martin Luther King, Jr., civil rights pioneer Bernard Lafayette has spent his lifetime fighting for justice and equality through non-violence. Lafayette said he’s focused his life on non-violence because that was the subject of the last conversation he had with Dr. King, Jr. just a few hours before King was shot and killed. That non-violence training led him around the world; to Nigeria, where more than 60,000 former militants laid down their arms; to South Africa; and to Colombia where Lafayette was kidnapped for a short time by the FARC terrorist group. He has also started a number of non-violence training programs in the United States; including in Florida, Texas, and Green Haven Correctional facility in New York. “The irony of the thing is I’ve met people who have followed in that path from Green Have n prison, the results,” said Lafayette, pointing to St. Francis College Criminal Justice Major Felix Colon ’18 who went through Lafayette’s non-violence training program while behind bars. “They say you cast your bread on the water and it will return. I’m looking at returns and the returns look good to me.” ●  Video—https://youtu.be/hfJ5vF-FoTI Charter Day—Fr. Patrick Desbois A P R I L 2 8 — The keynote speaker for St. Francis College’s 133rd Charter Day convocation was Fr. Patrick Desbois, a French, Catholic priest and President of Yahad-In Unum, a global humanitarian organization dedicated to identifying and commemorating the sites of Jewish and Roma mass executions in Eastern Europe during World War II. His organization also now works to honor the Catholic Yazidis in Iraq who were executed by ISIS. Fr. Desbois said that when people talk about the Holocaust they often refer to concentration camps like Auschwitz. But he points out that while 1.1 million people were killed at Auschwitz, 2.4 million were killed by gunfire in small towns and villages across the continent. Many of these executions were public spectacles where school was cancelled so entire families could come and watch the Jews being shot and killed. He says he needs to tell these stories to urge people to stand up to terror. “Don’t wait for people to act in your place when the planet is burning. Don’t close your eyes, otherwise, perhaps you will wake up one day in nightmare” ● See the full list of Charter Day honorees at www.sfc.edu/news-feed/~post/ charter-day-celebrates-scholarship-20170517  Video—https://youtu.be/1gFav79L8zs S T . F R A N C I S C O L L E G E T E R R I E R   |   F A L L 2 0 1 7   |   V O L U M E 8 1 , N U M B E R 1   9