DreamWeek was born just five years ago as an adjunct to the city’s well-established MLK March, an event like no other in the country in celebrating Martin Luther King Jr.’s life and legacy.
DreamWeek was born just five years ago as an adjunct to the city’s well-established MLK March, an event like no other in the country in celebrating Martin Luther King Jr.’s life and legacy.
For the group assembled Friday morning on the Eastside, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream of equality and tolerance has a broader reach than ever.
In the historic space that was once home to St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, the oldest majority African-American congregation in the city, more than 100 local leaders kicked off DreamWeek, the annual citywide celebration of King’s legacy. Speaking at The Spire, keynote speaker Ed Newton said that King’s vision – especially in today’s increasingly diverse society – applies to all people, regardless of race, culture, religion, or socioeconomic status.
“Dr. Martin Luther King died for something that was significant,” said Newton, lead pastor of Community Bible Church. “It was more than just little white girls and little white boys playing with little African-American boys and girls. It was for the understanding that we will no longer be seen as multicolored, but as multicultural” in today’s global society, and that means respecting each other’s diverse viewpoints and beliefs.
Keeping that in mind is especially important in a city like San Antonio that is growing both in population and diversity.
San Antonio Mayor Ivy Taylor, the city’s first black mayor, said that DreamWeek is “an extension” of King’s dream, and encourages the city to embrace his ideals and work toward tolerance, equality, and diversity.
“I think it’s entirely appropriate, especially in these days and times, that we be even more diligent in reflecting … and thinking about what work is necessary to bring Dr. King’s dream to life,” Taylor said. “In the past we’ve kind of scratched the surface … and now we really need to dig deep and delve into what that dream is really about … which is ensuring that each and every person is connected to opportunities and prosperity.”
SAN ANTONIO, Texas — DreamWeek 2017 has kicked off, with a message to honor the past, take stock in the present, and present a vision for the future.
DreamVoice President and Founder Shokare Nakpodia said that organizers are hoping to allow people to vent a little bit.
For the fifth year, Dream Week in San Antonio will be a platform for self-expression, tolerance, diversity, and equality.
“The goal is really we just need to say, there shouldn’t be any surprises really if you listen to people,” Nakpodia said.
This year more than 160 events and panel discussions will tackle a wide variety of topics.
“Such as gun control, how people speak, talk about voting rights, obviously we still have issue of gender and religious rights as well,” Nakpodia said.
While discussions will focus on specific issues, the annual MLK march becomes a melting pot of cultures and mouth pieces for civil rights. Now in its 30th year, organizers are expecting the biggest turn-out to date.
“I hope that we can hit the 500,000 folk mark this year. We’re at about 350,000 which is still head and shoulders above every other march in the country,” said District 2 City Councilman Alan Warrick.
Dream Week events provide the platform and the MLK Junior Commission awards the tools for success. This year more than $400,000 in scholarship money will be given to local students.
“It’s really a great thing to see the city come together and focus on our young people because they are the future and they are Doctor King’s dream and Doctor King’s legacy,” Warrick said.
It’s through a legacy of peace and diversity that San Antonio reflects itself.
“We have very unique way of settling our conflicts with very little drama for a city this size,” said Nakpodia.
An inspiring discussion, an exchange of ideas, and igniting change in the city we call home.
–MORE INFORMATION:–
• For more information on DreamWeek: https://dreamweek.org/
• For more on the MLK March: https://www.sanantonio.gov/mlk/
DreamWeek, a 16-day summit of open forums in and around downtown, kicks off today with events leading up to the city’s Martin Luther King Jr. March, regarded as one of the nation’s largest processions.
A ceremonial breakfast is scheduled from 8 to 9:30 a.m. at The Spire, 230 Center St., with Mayor Ivy Taylor scheduled to give opening remarks. Ed Newton, pastor of Community Bible Church, is the keynote speaker.
Shokare Nakpodia, president and founder of DreamWeek, said the energy for the event comes from the thousands of people who march as a collective for equality, diversity and tolerance. Nakpodia said he founded the summit in 2012 as an environment where people can speak, debate and listen to all kinds of ideas without violence.
More than 100 events are scheduled for the summit. This year’s forums feature a range of topics, including LGBTQ youth homelessness; a morning of remembrance of the Holocaust; the Asian-American experience and an event honoring seven original Mississippi Freedom Riders.
City Council District 2 liaison DeMonte Alexander said DreamWeek is a vital part of the march that’s organized by the city’s Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Commission. The march will be held Jan. 16 at 10 a.m., starting at 3501 MLK Drive and ending at Pittman-Sullivan Park, 1101 Iowa.
“It’s like an onion. You have the core, which is the commission, which can only reach so far in terms of demographics,” Alexander said. “DreamWeek is the other layers of the onion that talks about not only MLK’s legacy and things he stood for, but other issues and opens the discussion up for people to have a voice about how they feel about certain issues.”
The theme of this year’s march is “King’s legacy for peace is justice for all. Remember! Celebrate! Act!”
The keynote speaker at the commission’s commemorative program will be award-winning recording artist and activist David Banner. The program will also include R&B artist Jidenna.
This is the 30th anniversary of the commission and the city sponsoring the first official MLK March. The MLK Jr. Commission was established April 3, 1986, by a city resolution under the term of former Mayor Henry Cisneros.
Alexander, also communications chairman for the commission, said the march is the culmination of year-round planning. A large part of the commission’s focus is the Martin Luther King Jr. scholarship program.
“All of this is for Dr. King, who was an advocate for doing these type of things to help continue to push for education in the community,” Alexander said. “That’s why we do everything we do to raise money for the kids.”
vtdavis@express-news.net
The fifth-annual DreamWeek San Antonio gets underway Friday.
DreamWeek this year will be 16 days of events, including the big Martin Luther King Jr. March on Jan. 16. The largest march in the nation is organized by the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission, which is celebrating 30 years as one of the city’s leading volunteer organizations.
This year the organization will hold panels about gun violence in the community, fake news affecting the 2016 election, homelessness in San Antonio, and increasing the awareness and knowledge of LGBTQ issues.
“The goal for the 2017 summit is to stimulate an interest in receiving and accepting a balance of options, voices and tastes in a manner which allows for individual representation,” DreamVoice president Shokare Nakpodia said.
This year’s summit will kick off with an opening ceremony Friday, featuring keynote speaker Dr. Ed Newton, lead pastor at Community Bible Church.
For a look at all the events this year, click here.
Community, civic and spiritual leaders will gather in Windcrest on Saturday for a town hall forum about gun violence in San Antonio.
Titled “How to Reduce Gun Violence in Our Community,” the event is co-hosted by the local chapter of the Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, a grassroots organization formed in response to the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings.
The event will include opening remarks by San Antonio Mayor Ivy Taylorand a panel featuring a variety of leaders.
Kim Anderson, head of the local chapter of Moms Demand Action, said the event will bring a diverse group of people together to formulate potential solutions.
“We’re coming together with our other faith leaders to see what the solution is,” said Anderson, whose brother was murdered. “How can we minimize the gun violence that’s going on in our community? We want everyone to see the real life impact gun violence has on people.”
The panel is part of DreamWeek San Antonio, which includes symposiums, film screenings, concerts and art galleries held until Jan. 21 aimed at promoting an exchange of ideas on criminal justice, education, business and health issues.
The forum, which is free, is from 4 to 6 p.m. Saturday at the New Creation Christian Fellowship, 8700 Fourwinds Drive in Windcrest.
People interested in attending the event can register at www.icecoldaffair.ticketleap.com/community-forum.
Martin Luther King Jr.’s message of unity amidst diversity is celebrated across San Antonio January 6-21, 2017, with the DreamWeek summit, a collection of events aimed at fostering cultural equality.
Founded in 2012, DreamWeek is an event brought to life by San Antonio’s DreamVoice LLC. According to the event website, the aim of DreamWeek is to “invite all to participate in an open forum where real-world issues are discussed in a well-balanced manner.” Events take place across the city and include film screenings, concerts, art exhibits, panel discussion, debates, and more.
The event culminates in a 150,000+ person march organized by the City of San Antonio’s MLK Commission. The march is one of the largest of its kind in the United States.
Each of the days of DreamWeek is dedicated to one of the following themes: City, Sports, Cuisine, Health, Energy, Technology, Education, Arts, Youth, Spirit, Justice and Business. DreamWeek focuses on the teachings of Dr. King and hopes to bring his humanitarian ideals into the modern age.
With its multi-cultural heritage, San Antonio makes a gorgeous backdrop for King’s message of diversity, with numerous businesses and community groups sponsoring and participating in the summit. San Antonio Mayor Ivy Taylor recently said, “I hope that people will take the lessons of Dr. King and apply them in their everyday lives and communities. There are so many opportunities for each of us to make a difference and if we live in the spirit of Dr. King we have the potential to make a truly significant impact on The City of San Antonio and the world around us.”
To find out more about the events of DreamWeek, or how to participate visit dreamweek.org
Established in 2013 with a mission to advance voices of tolerance, equality and diversity, DreamWeek is a citywide summit filled with discussions, screenings, concerts, exhibits and mixers rooted in 12 key topics: city, sports, cuisine, health, environment, technology, education, arts, youth, spirit, justice and business. Spread across 15 days and anchored by the Martin Luther King Jr. March on January 16, the fifth annual observance kicks off this week with an array of early highlights — including a reception for local artist Veronica Castillo’s “Trees of Life” exhibit (free, 6pm Wed, Forest Hills Library, 5245 Ingram Road); a talk between artists Robert Langham III and Casey James Wilson about the works they contributed to the group show “Hold Still” (free, 6pm Thu, Blue Star Contemporary, 116 Blue Star); “Foreign by Land, Native by Heart,” an exhibit examining the refugee experience from the perspective of four San Antonio-based families who fled their homes in Malaysia, Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iran ($8-$10, 9am-5pm Fri, Institute of Texan Cultures, 801 E. César E. Chávez Blvd.); Delta Rho Lambda Chapter (of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc.) and Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America’s interactive panel discussion “The Election is Over, Now What?” (free, 4-6pm Sat, New Creation Christian Fellowship, 700 Fourwinds Drive); a reading from Anne Moody’s autobiography Coming of Age in the Mississippi (free, noon-2pm Sat, Carver Branch Library, 3550 E. Commerce St.); the opening of British-Nigerian photographer Juliana Kasumu’s solo show “From Moussor to Tignon: The Evolution of the Head-Tie” (free, 5-7pm Sat, Musical Bridges Around the World Gallery, 23705 I-10 W.); keepHer San Antonio’s community-building discussion “keepHer Dream Alive: Celebrating the Long Legacy of Women of Color (free, 2:30pm Sat, Launch SA Auditorium, 600 Soledad St.); and an LGBT & Ally Safe Zone Training session led by Pride Center San Antonio (free, 11am-3pm Sat, Westfall Branch Library, 6111 Rosedale Ct.).
For a complete schedule of DreamWeek events, visit dreamweek.org.
Beginning Friday, Jan. 6 through Wednesday, Jan. 21, San Antonio will engage in the fifth annual DreamWeek summit of events. Planted in a city that thrives in diversity, DreamWeek aims to bring people together to attend a myriad of partner-hosted events throughout the city. This multicultural convergence of thought is designed to spread awareness and enlightenment on tolerance, equality and diversity.
San Antonians can inspire the start of their new year by attending the DreamWeek Opening Ceremony Breakfast with opening remarks from Mayor Ivy Taylor. Expanding on the success of previous years, DreamWeek will continue to keep with the spirit of inclusion, as there are events for all to participate in and enjoy including a series of keynote speaking engagements, evening mixers, live music, culinary galas, film screenings, art gallery exhibits, panel discussions, health and fitness expos, and more.
Throughout the events, participants honor the past, take stock of the present, and present a vision for the future. DreamWeek coincides with the MLK March, which is one of the largest marches in the country. The march is organized by the City of San Antonio Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission, which is celebrating 30 years as one of the city’s leading volunteer organizations.
“Our fractured nation has had, for some time, a challenging time dealing with divisive issues such as race, immigration, gender and abortion. In a difficult and trying 2016 election year cycle this was compounded by the ‘dislocation’ of facts and the ‘resourcing’ of truths. Our goal for the 2017 summit is to stimulate an interest in receiving and accepting a balance of opinions, voices and tastes in a manner which allows for individual representation,” stated DreamVoice, LLC President Shokare Nakpodia. “Within this context, we advance that truth is a mirror, and our community in its entirety should be on display… blemishes and all.” Nakpodia continued. “We can only choose what we are to become, but not what we have been. DreamWeek 2017 aims to consolidate the progress made by our hosting partners and set up more paths to reveal our capacity for tolerance, diversity and equality as an enlightened community.”
DreamWeek is presented by DreamVoice, LLC, a collection of civic-minded individuals who are committed to advancing and modernizing the teachings of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and humanitarians like him. The summit kicks off at 7:30 a.m. on Friday, Jan. 6 with an Opening Breakfast Ceremony. For a full list of events and ticket information, please visit www.dreamweek.org.