Quinnipiac Magazine - Spring 2018 - Douglass Remembered...with singer and actor Harry Belafonte, a...

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QUINNIPIAC MAGAZINE 7 Actor and social activist Danny Glover has spent countless hours with abolitionist Frederick Douglass between the pages of history books and the sentences of speeches that advocated for freedom. The candid and insightful Glover, maybe best known for his film roles in “The Color Purple” and the “Lethal Weap- on” franchise, discussed the fight for civil rights and social justice in February during a program titled, “From Aboli- tion to #BLM: A Conversation with Danny Glover,” before about 600 people in Burt Kahn Court. Glover sat in an oversized easy chair for his 90-minute talk with Khalilah Brown-Dean, associate professor of polit- ical science. He was perfectly comfortable on stage, yet noticeably uncomfortable with the current state of affairs. “It’s pretty obvious when we look at what’s happening today, it’s still relevant. Not only as we look at the issues around race that are happening in this country, but the issues around race that are happening in the rest of the world,” Glover said. “Are the people of color the ones who are the most vulnerable and the most marginalized in this system of capitalism? Of course, they are. It’s historic.” As the keynote speaker for Black History Month at Quinnipiac, Glover talked about the arts as a platform for change in America. He spoke fondly of his friendship with singer and actor Harry Belafonte, a longtime civil rights advocate. He also quoted Paul Robeson, the ground- breaking actor, activist and son of an escaped slave who said, “Artists are the gatekeepers of truth.” Glover’s appearance commemorated the 200th anni- versary of the birth of Douglass, who was born a slave in Maryland. He escaped to the North at the age of 20 and established himself as a talented speaker and writer. In February, Ireland’s Great Hunger Institute opened a yearlong exhibition titled “Frederick Douglass in Ire- land: “The Black O’Connell,” which focuses on the time Douglass spent in Ireland from 1845–46 and his enduring relationship with that country. The exhibition is free and open to the public in the Lender Special Collection Room in the Arnold Bernhard Library. Go.QU.edu/douglass. DOUGLASS REMEMBERED Danny Glover reflects on the teachings of the eloquent abolitionist During one point in the program, Brown-Dean read an especially eloquent quote by Douglass, who believed there is no progress without strule: “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and it never will.” She followed the quote with a question to Glover: “What is it that we should be demanding and for whom?” Glover didn’t hesitate with his response: “It’s always been to demand truth and justice for all people.” One of the most stirring moments of the program came when Glover read from the prescient and provocative Douglass speech, “The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro.” Douglass delivered the speech in Rochester, New York, on July 5, 1852. Glover’s dramatic oration hinted at what Douglass might have sounded like that summer day in upstate New York. “The conscience of the nation must be roused. The propriety of the nation must be startled. The hypocrisy of the nation must be exposed, and its crimes against God and man must be proclaimed and denounced. … Your celebration is a sham, your boasted liberty an unholy license. … There’s not a nation on the Earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States at this very hour.” After the program, Brown-Dean reflected on the meaning and the impact of Glover’s message. “How do we reduce that gap between the principle of democracy and our everyday practice?” Brown-Dean asked. “With that backdrop celebrating Frederick Douglass and his 200th birthday, to have a contemporary artist and activist link that together, then the challenge is on us. The gauntlet has been thrown. What do we do with that?” BY BRIAN KOONZ PHOTO AUTUMN DRISCOLL Danny Glover addressed a packed Burt Kahn Court during Black History Month. The unattributed sketch of Frederick Douglass, below, appears in the first edition of the Narrative, published in Boston in 1845. CAMPUS News

Transcript of Quinnipiac Magazine - Spring 2018 - Douglass Remembered...with singer and actor Harry Belafonte, a...

Page 1: Quinnipiac Magazine - Spring 2018 - Douglass Remembered...with singer and actor Harry Belafonte, a longtime civil rights advocate. He also quoted Paul Robeson, the ground-breaking

Q U I N N I P I A C M A G A Z I N E 7

Actor and social activist Danny Glover has spent countless hours with abolitionist Frederick Douglass between the pages of history books and the sentences of speeches that advocated for freedom. The candid and insightful Glover, maybe best known for his film roles in “The Color Purple” and the “Lethal Weap-on” franchise, discussed the fight for civil rights and social justice in February during a program titled, “From Aboli-tion to #BLM: A Conversation with Danny Glover,” before about 600 people in Burt Kahn Court. Glover sat in an oversized easy chair for his 90-minute talk with Khalilah Brown-Dean, associate professor of polit-ical science. He was perfectly comfortable on stage, yet noticeably uncomfortable with the current state of affairs. “It’s pretty obvious when we look at what’s happening today, it’s still relevant. Not only as we look at the issues around race that are happening in this country, but the issues around race that are happening in the rest of the world,” Glover said. “Are the people of color the ones who are the most vulnerable and the most marginalized in this system of capitalism? Of course, they are. It’s historic.” As the keynote speaker for Black History Month at Quinnipiac, Glover talked about the arts as a platform for change in America. He spoke fondly of his friendship with singer and actor Harry Belafonte, a longtime civil rights advocate. He also quoted Paul Robeson, the ground-breaking actor, activist and son of an escaped slave who said, “Artists are the gatekeepers of truth.” Glover’s appearance commemorated the 200th anni-versary of the birth of Douglass, who was born a slave in Maryland. He escaped to the North at the age of 20 and established himself as a talented speaker and writer. In February, Ireland’s Great Hunger Institute opened a yearlong exhibition titled “Frederick Douglass in Ire-land: “The Black O’Connell,” which focuses on the time Douglass spent in Ireland from 1845–46 and his enduring relationship with that country. The exhibition is free and open to the public in the Lender Special Collection Room in the Arnold Bernhard Library. Go.QU.edu/douglass.

DOUGLASSREMEMBEREDDanny Glover reflects on the teachings of the eloquent abolitionist

During one point in the program, Brown-Dean read an especially eloquent quote by Douglass, who believed there is no progress without struggle: “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never has and it never will.” She followed the quote with a question to Glover: “What is it that we should be demanding and for whom?” Glover didn’t hesitate with his response: “It’s always been to demand truth and justice for all people.” One of the most stirring moments of the program came when Glover read from the prescient and provocative Douglass speech, “The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro.” Douglass delivered the speech in Rochester, New York, on July 5, 1852. Glover’s dramatic oration hinted at what Douglass might have sounded like that summer day in upstate New York. “The conscience of the nation must be roused. The propriety of the nation must be startled. The hypocrisy of the nation must be exposed, and its crimes against God and man must be proclaimed and denounced. … Your celebration is a sham, your boasted liberty an unholy license. … There’s not a nation on the Earth guilty of practices more shocking and bloody than are the people of the United States at this very hour.” After the program, Brown-Dean reflected on the meaning and the impact of Glover’s message. “How do we reduce that gap between the principle of democracy and our everyday practice?” Brown-Dean asked. “With that backdrop celebrating Frederick Douglass and his 200th birthday, to have a contemporary artist and activist link that together, then the challenge is on us. The gauntlet has been thrown. What do we do with that?”

B Y B R I A N K O O N ZP H O T O A U T U M N D R I S C O L L

Danny Glover addressed a packed Burt Kahn Court during Black History Month. The unattributed sketch of Frederick Douglass, below, appears in the first edition of the Narrative, published in Boston in 1845.

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