JAMES MEREDITH Speaks At MTSU's Unity Luncheon

Feb 17, 2019 at 04:17 pm by bryan


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"That James Meredith was a bad dude, wasn't he?"--was the immediate reaction of James Meredith himself to a video shown Thursday at the 23rd annual Unity Luncheon in MTSU's Student Union Ballroom.

The annual tribute to local unsung heroes of color honored five people who have made notable contributions in the areas of community service, excellence in sports, contribution to black arts, education and advocating civility.

Meredith, who became the first African-American student at the previously all-white University of Mississippi in 1962, delivered the keynote address.

As he delivered the history of his ancestors, which included whites and Native Americans, the 85-year-old Meredith likened the drive for civil rights to a wedding compact that requires commitment to both man's laws and God's laws.

"The legal paper provides the legal right and responsibility of the two parties, but it is a true marriage only when the legal terms of the contract are carried out in love leading to and maintaining the marital relationship," Meredith said.

Again referring to the Biblical teaching that "the meek shall inherit the earth," Meredith cited poverty and the failure of people to alleviate it as a pathway to unfair treatment in society.

"The injustices of the poor and the number of poor increases over time to desperate levels," Meredith said. "This results from the economic condition produced by the commercial and landed aristocracy. Greater inequities increase because the new elite is able to exploit the poor ... Wealth becomes concentrated in fewer and fewer hands."

This year's Unity Luncheon honorees are:

Jimmy Hart, director of MTSU's Office of News and Media Relations, was presented with a special award as an unsung hero of the university.

MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee said he always looks forward to this particular Black History Month celebration.

"You don't see these individuals on the front page of the newspaper or on the networks, but they make the community what it is," McPhee said.

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