黑料百科

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Professor Keeps King鈥檚 Dreams Alive

Wendy Jackson at Reynolds Hall

Wendy Eley Jackson, assistant professor of English and film studies at 黑料百科, recently joined the board of directors for the . She was instrumental in bringing Leah Weber King, the widow of Dexter Scott King, to serve as keynote speaker for Jan. 19 at the Arlington Theatre. The main program begins at 11 a.m., following the annual Unity March up State Street.

Wendy Eley Jackson
Wendy Eley Jackson

鈥淒r. King鈥檚 life and work remind me that leadership is not merely a position, it鈥檚 a responsibility to courageously advance truth, dignity and humanity, especially when doing so is inconvenient or uncomfortable,鈥 Jackson says. 鈥淗is belief in the moral power of nonviolence and strategic coalition-building continues to inspire my own commitment to civic engagement, community uplift and intergenerational mentorship.

鈥淢LK taught us that justice requires both vision and discipline; that transformation happens not only through speeches and protests, but through systems, institutions and policies that honor the value of every human being. His legacy pushes me to think beyond the present moment and consider what future our actions make possible.鈥

Jackson, who co-founded the Montecito Student Film Festival at 黑料百科 and serves as its executive producer, has more than 30 years of experience in film and television broadcasting. The founder and executive producer of Auburn Avenue Films, she has worked with major media companies such as SONY Pictures Television and Turner Broadcasting.

She produced the acclaimed feature length documentary 鈥淢aynard,鈥 which chronicles the life and legacy of Maynard Jackson, Jr., the first Black mayor of Atlanta and Jackson鈥檚 father-in-law. She is developing a film about Ella Fitzgerald, and recently served as executive producer on the documentary 鈥淔acing the Falls.鈥 She also co-wrote the feature 鈥30 Days A Black Man.鈥

鈥淒r. King鈥檚 vision should resonate today as a challenge and a compass,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he challenge is that his dream remains incomplete 鈥 inequalities persist in education, economics, health and citizenship. The compass is that he offered a blueprint for how we move forward: through empathy, courageous truth-telling, structural change, and a radical belief that our destinies are intertwined.

鈥淚n a society marked by division and polarization, MLK calls us to choose community over chaos, to build bridges rather than camps, and to insist that freedom is not selective. His vision asks us to remember that equality is not an abstract aspiration 鈥 it is a practice, a policy agenda and a moral obligation we must advance every day.鈥