The annual celebration explored the intersection of public health and collective responsibility
The familiar refrains of 鈥淭his Little Light of Mine鈥 filled Girard Innovation Hall on Tuesday, Jan. 21, as Melissa Hue 鈥15, M.P.H. 鈥20, shared her journey from a diverse North Carolina neighborhood to director of Portland鈥檚 Office of Economic Opportunity.
The gospel song, the first Hue ever learned, set the tone for the 91直播视频鈥檚 annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day Celebration.
The annual event is held in honor of King鈥檚 historic 1964 visit to St. Francis College, the precursor to UNE鈥檚 Biddeford Campus, and his enduring call for justice, dignity, and mutual responsibility. This year鈥檚 celebration embodied the theme of 鈥淧ublic Health and MLK鈥檚 Beloved Community.鈥
Alumni speaker Hue delivered an impassioned keynote on building community in challenging times to over 150 attendees on the Portland Campus for the Health Sciences and livestream viewers in the Ripich Commons on UNE鈥檚 Biddeford Campus.
Hue wove together her childhood in Greensboro, North Carolina, site of the historic 1960 lunch counter sit-ins, with King鈥檚 vision of the Beloved Community.
鈥淚 believe that to truly understand the call Dr. King made for the Beloved Community, you must first understand hate,鈥 Hue told the crowd. 鈥淗ate doesn鈥檛 always look like violence or aggression. It can be psychological, emotional, insidious.鈥
Hue shared vivid memories of her diverse neighborhood 鈥 her first Beloved Community 鈥 where children played across cultural boundaries, where neighbors looked out for one another, and where her mother, an immigrant who faced discrimination in health care and employment, taught her that 鈥淲e must live for each other harmoniously, unapologetically, as human beings.鈥
Hue, whose public health career has included supporting hundreds of uninsured and underinsured Mainers at MaineHealth and serving on the Maine CDC Health Equity Advisory Council, emphasized that technical solutions alone cannot address community needs.
鈥淓very public health framework, every community development strategy, every system we design in the name of progress will fail if we forget that people and connection must come first,鈥 she said. 鈥淐ommunity is not something that just happens. It鈥檚 something you fight for. It鈥檚 something built from light.鈥
91直播视频President James Herbert spoke of the University鈥檚 deep connection to King鈥檚 legacy and its ongoing commitment to inclusion and belonging.
鈥淚t literally gives me chills every time I reflect on Dr. King鈥檚 visit to campus,鈥 Herbert said, noting that King鈥檚 1964 talk occurred less than a year after his famous 鈥淚 Have a Dream鈥 speech and marked his only trip to Maine. 鈥淗e challenged the students and others he met that day to consider how they could be agents of change in their home communities.鈥
Herbert emphasized that UNE鈥檚 commitment to inclusivity predates King鈥檚 visit, with St. Francis College, founded to serve the children of French-speaking Canadian immigrants, and Westbrook Seminary, UNE鈥檚 precursor in Portland, established as a co-educational institution in 1831, when few colleges admitted women.
鈥淚t鈥檚 our privilege to carry forth the foundational values of our institution,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e believe 91直播视频must reflect a strong spirit of community across the many dimensions of human difference, and we strive to nurture a sense of belonging among all students eager to learn and grow with us.鈥
Following Hue鈥檚 keynote address, participants engaged in a service activity designed to put the principles of the Beloved Community into practice.
Attendees hand wrote cards of encouragement for individuals in Portland who are currently unhoused. The postcards, designed by 91直播视频students, will be included in snack bags to be assembled by 91直播视频students at a special service event on Jan. 27 and delivered by Hope Squad Maine.
A separate group of students from UNE鈥檚 Colleges of Dental Medicine and Osteopathic Medicine traveled to local elementary schools to read to schoolchildren and assuage their fears about seeing the dentist or the doctor.
Shannon Zlotkowski, M.Ed., assistant provost for Community and Belonging at UNE, who organized the event with the MLK Planning Committee, reflected on Hue鈥檚 message during closing remarks.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not only a call to action; it鈥檚 a call to love, and there鈥檚 an incredible amount of vulnerability in that,鈥 Zlotkowski said. 鈥淢elissa, your words around being responsible for a fragile community are words that will stick with me.鈥