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Donia Human Rights Center Annual Martin Luther King, Jr. Lecture | Still Struggling to Cross That Bridge: Connecting the US and African Civil Rights Movements

Join the 2026 MLK Symposium for a series of powerful events exploring the global and local fight for justice, starting January 15 with Professor Ollie Johnson’s lecture on Afro-Brazilian Political Activism and Representation at the RLL Commons. On January 19, the UM Detroit Center will host "Unbowed and Unbroken: The Enduring Struggle for Justice," featuring a keynote livestream with Donzaleigh Abernathy and Derrick Johnson, followed by a live panel with Detroiters Nancy Parker and Orlando Bailey. The series concludes on January 21 at Weiser Hall with Hala Al-Karib and Carina Ray, who will discuss the deep historical connections between African and U.S. civil rights movements in their lecture, "Still Struggling to Cross That Bridge".Open to Everyone

Hala Al-Karib is the Regional Director of the Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa (SIHA) and is the Donia Human Rights Center’s inaugural Raoul Wallenberg Human Rights Practitioner Fellow. In her lecture, Ms. Al-Karib will reflect on her experiences advocating for human rights in the African context and how it mirrors the fight for civil rights in the United States.

“I grew up in the diminishing shadows of the African liberation movements. My childhood recollections were filled with long political debates among my parents, their friends, older cousins, and uncles about memories of leaders like Biko of South Africa, Senghor of Senegal, Nkrumah of Ghana, Nyerere of Tanzania, Nasser of Egypt, and Patrice Lumumba of the Congo. Naturally, this history has shaped my political consciousness.

Later in my life, I discovered that at the same time, another liberation movement was unfolding across the Atlantic, where young men and women of African descent were challenging a system that disregarded their humanity; they also vigorously strived for equality, justice, and human rights. In this conversation I am going to have with you, I will seek to illustrate how the quest for liberation and decolonization in Africa parallels the civil rights movement in America; both movements are reflecting our extended struggle to cross over that bridge towards a peaceful and just society.”

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