草莓影视

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草莓影视er Magazine Summer 2023

Getting on the Bus

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草莓影视ers explore racial reconciliation through the first post-pandemic Sankofa trip.

About 40 草莓影视 students, staff, and faculty fully immersed themselves in the Sankofa experience last February, following several years of scaled-back versions of the event.

The Sankofa experience, funded by a grant from the Lilly foundation and culminating in a 60-hour bus ride across a select region of the United States, is modeled after the Civil Rights era Freedom Rides. During the trip, participants explore the theological, political, and cultural dimensions of racial reconciliation and human wholeness. In the weeks leading up to the trip, the Sankofa group engages in readings, discussions, film screenings, and classes.

鈥淪ankofa as racial reconciliation isn鈥檛 something we do because it鈥檚 the new thing,鈥 said Tony Zamble, director of University Ministries. 鈥淚t flows from our understanding of the Gospel.鈥

 

鈥淪ankofa as racial reconciliation isn鈥檛 something we do because it鈥檚 the new thing, it flows from our understanding of the Gospel.鈥 鈥擳ony Zamble, Director of University Ministries

The 2023 trip traveled to the Southeast, with stops in Washington, D.C., to visit the National Museum of African American History and Culture; Thomas Jefferson鈥檚 Monticello, in Charlottesville, Virginia; and the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center in Cincinnati.

Previous Sankofa trips have taken participants to Birmingham, Alabama, and to the National Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, Tennessee.

鈥淥ne of the best parts about Sankofa is that everyone who got on that bus didn鈥檛 have to, but they did,鈥 said Campus Pastor and Athletic Chaplain Dr. Terence Gadsden.

During a special chapel service held after the 2023 trip, students spoke about why they chose to get on the bus.

鈥淚 wanted to learn more about what isn鈥檛 taught in school,鈥 Amir Fakhari said.

鈥淢y goal was to sharpen my craft in history, to become the best I can be,鈥 said Jeremiah Thomas, adding the most poignant moment of the trip for him was seeing his own name on a list of slaves at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center.

For Brooklyn Seals, the most important moment of the trip was standing in line to view Emmett Till鈥檚 casket, which was recently donated to the Smithsonian鈥檚 National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C., another stop for the group.

鈥淭o be standing there, in that line, just like they had in Chicago so many years ago, and knowing we live in Chicago. I reflected on how we were doing the same thing. That was intense,鈥 Seals said.

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