| Dialogue, Films and Celebration
 
              Mark African-American History Month at SPU 
 AN AFRICAN-AMERICAN, Joe Snell was raised in the South and
 
            moved to Seattle two years ago. Upon arrival, he remembers being
 
            curious about why so many African-Americans, especially in the 1940s,
 
            had moved West, where they had marginal historical roots or cultural
 
            identity. He learned that available jobs were only one piece of the
 
            picture. Many went West to escape the harsh Jim Crow segregation
 
            laws that in very real ways were like a second enslavement.
 
 Snell’s ongoing curiosity about the history of African-Americans
 
            now informs his work as ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ’s assistant
 
            director of student programs for intercultural affairs. During African-American
 
            History Month in February, he invited to campus historian and Pulitzer
 
            Prize nominee Quintard Taylor Jr. from the University of Washington.
 
            Taylor’s topic was “In Search of the Racial Frontier:
 
            The African-American Quest for Freedom in the West.”
 
 SPU students, faculty and staff found other educational experiences
 
            during the month as well. Up to 50 students gathered for a four-part,
 
            comprehensive look at race relations in America between the Civil
 
            War and the Civil Rights Movement. They watched and discussed a PBS
 
            video presentation titled “The Rise and Fall of Jim Crow” documenting
 
            the brutally oppressive era. “The series fleshed out students’ understanding
 
            of the African-American experience resisting oppression through education,
 
            political action, business development and other means,” says
 
            Snell.
 
 The movie “Mississippi Burning,” a searing tale of the
 
            murder of civil rights workers in the 1960s, was also screened on
 
            campus. A panel of faculty and staff followed the film with a discussion
 
            of the racial divide in America.
 
 The month concluded with a celebration of African food and culture
 
            sponsored by the MOSAIC intercultural club under the direction of
 
            student organizer Kwabena Badu-Antwi. A drum and dance ensemble from
 
            Ghana performed traditional West African music, and guests dined
 
            on authentic African cuisine. Only six weeks after African-American
 
            History Month, SPU welcomed Brenda Salter McNeil, president and founder
 
            of Overflow Ministries, as the 2003 Staley Lecturer. McNeil spoke
 
            in April on issues of racial and ethnic reconciliation.
 
 The hope,
 
            says Snell, was that out of the spring’s events would come two things:
 
            a sense of cross-cultural community and a greater appreciation for
 
            different cultures and ethnic histories.
 
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  From the President
 Cultivating hope in the face of chaos is vital today. "This is the time
 
for a Christian university to dig down deep into its formative foundations … and
 
decide quite clearly what bread we have to offer,” says President Philip
 
Eaton.
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 My Response
 “The soldier and chaplain are each unique callings fulfilled by those who
 
respond to the call of the nation and to the call of God,” says Chaplain
 
(Major General) Gaylord T. Gunhus, U.S. Army Chief of Chaplains.[My Response]
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