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| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

| 15th Anniversary  |  January 15-31, 2027 |  Exchanging Ideas  |  Inspiring Discussion  |  Igniting Change

Category

NEWS

1Million Push Up Challenge

Dreamweek San Antonio kicks off with 1-million push-up challenge for health awareness

By NEWS

Today there was a 1-million push-up challenge!

There was music, food, and free community workout — including the 1 million push-up challenge.

It is in an effort to promote the importance of health and wellness.

This is just one of the 265 events going on in the next 17-days around San Antonio.

Dreamweek San Antonio is among the largest community curated event nationwide celebrating tolerance and diversity.

Musical story of Tina Turner arrives at Majestic Theatre during DreamWeek

Musical story of Tina Turner arrives at Majestic Theatre during DreamWeek

By NEWS

Broadway in San Antonio’s TINA – The Tina Turner Musical tells the story of a young girl who grew up in a farming community in rural Tennessee and rose to international fame as the “Queen of Rock ’n’ Roll.”

The musical opens Jan. 16 at the Majestic Theatre and runs through Jan. 21, coinciding with DreamWeek and offering an opportunity to consider how a powerful Black woman’s stardom has inspired and influenced others to push hard toward their dreams.

“Her struggle in the music industry, the domestic violence, [as an] African American female, her whole story is an inspiration,” said Renee Watson, who chaired the San Antonio Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commission in 2021 and 2022 and was the first female chair of the commission’s March Committee.

“Because what [Martin Luther King Jr.] dreamed about is self-sufficiency, education and learning, getting out there, the world supporting you, to have multicultural communities supporting you. And her life is a prime example of that.”

Strength and resilience

Turner began life as Anna Mae Bullock picking cotton in Nutbush, a rural Tennessee farming community so small it doesn’t rate as a town. She later married musician Ike Turner, who renamed her Tina, positioning her as the vocalist for his powerful rock ’n’ roll ensemble. But his physical and emotional abuse at home and overworking her onstage frayed their personal and professional relationship.

Her opening verse lyrics to “Nutbush City Limits,” the 1973 song she wrote to signal independencefrom her abusive husband, succinctly describe the scene:

A church house, gin house
Schoolhouse, outhouse
On highway number nineteen
The people keep the city clean

Broadway actress Roz White plays Turner’s mother, Zelma Bullock, in TINA. In a videoconference interview during rehearsals in Austin, White marveled at how Turner, having endured such hardship, could even imagine creating a better future for herself.

San Antonio Report DreamWeek 2024

2024 DreamWeek summit calls for compassion

By NEWS

When he considers the devastation of conflicts in Gaza and Sudan, DreamVoice founder Shokare Nakpodia asserts that the seeds for global peace are first sown at home. Through dialogue, compassion and an understanding that each person has a singular perspective, we can then begin to envision change, he said.

With this ethos and the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr. built into its DNA, DreamVoice’s annual DreamWeek summit will feature over 230 events across 100 San Antonio venues from Jan. 12-28.

“The thing that would bring about peace and goodwill in this world does not exist presently, otherwise there would be peace,” said Nakpodia. “So how do we go about setting a stage to allow that to come about?”

For Nakpodia, community-born activities — from thoughtful panel discussions to cultural events and opportunities for proactive compassion — are apt starting points.

Since its inception in 2013, DreamWeek has grown to become what Nakpodia calls “the largest community-curated summit in the nation.” The two-week-long series features a constellation of ticketed and free opportunities for all ages.

This year’s celebration, The Compassion Drive, will introduce several inaugural events, including the debut of Dreamstage at Pearl with a free jazz concert on Friday, Jan. 12, featuring the Aaron Prado Quartet; Soul Spot DJ sets on Saturday, Jan. 13; and Gospel and Soul music by Devsoul and Friends on Jan. 14.

The complete DreamWeek events schedule is available to browse, and we’ve put together some highlights from this year’s lineup below.

Kick-off events

Civic leaders will help lead the DreamWeek festivities throughout the summit.

Donna Costa, restorative practices and trauma-informed care trainer and Technical in Bexar County’s Office of Criminal Justice, will kick things off as keynote speaker at Friday’s opening ceremony breakfast at 7:30 a.m. in the Jack Guenther Pavilion at the Briscoe Western Art Museum.

San Antonio Current DreamWeek 2024

San Antonio DreamWeek’s 12th annual celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. begins this week

By NEWS

The 12th annual San Antonio DreamWeek offers a packed series of civic-engagement events scheduled around Martin Luther King Jr. Day. How packed? So packed that it’s long outgrown its name, now spanning the better part of a month — from Jan. 12-28. Founded by San Antonio ad exec Shokare Nakpodia, the ever-expanding series of lectures, concerts, celebrations, discussions and happenings is designed to promote conversations around race, social justice and empowerment.

MLK March poster contest selects design symbolizing that San Antonio is 'moving forward'

MLK March poster contest selects design symbolizing that San Antonio is ‘moving forward’

By NEWS

Ahead of the Dr. Martin Luther King March and Celebrationon Monday and only days before the 17-day Dreamweek begins, the City of San Antonio named a winner in its poster art contest.

The Department of Arts and Culture’s Krystal Jones explained that “every year, our department partners with the Dr. Martin Luther King Junior Commission to launch a student art contest,” Jones said. “And so we had students from all around San Antonio submit artworks. And we just announced a winner at the Carver Community Cultural Arts Center: Alexa Villanueva [for] her artwork, My Today, Our Tomorrow, is the winner of this year’s celebration.”

The 15 year-old from Cole High School was selected from among 82 entries, and she said the honor was overwhelming.

“Just absolutely thrilled and very gracious. She is a student at Robert G. Cole High School, and she really wanted to honor her art teacher, which is the person who told her about the contest,” Jones said. “She’s an aspiring artist and just really excited — she’ll be going to a Spurs game as a part of winning this contest, and she’ll see her artwork all throughout the commemoration.”

“The instructions that they’re given is that their artwork will be the official poster of the commemoration. And T-shirts will be made with this image and this artwork,” she said. “And so really, we try to leave the parameters open as much as possible for our young artists to be as creative as they can.”

Jones said she felt the artwork’s composition and its content were uplifting. “It has this beautiful sunrise behind the San Antonio skyline, but the skyline looks like it’s walking forward,” she said. “There’s a lot of individuals’ legs coming out of the bottom of the skyline to really represent the city moving forward.”

The yearly march often draws about 300,000 participants. “We’ve heard from the MLK Commission that it is the largest in the nation because San Antonio is a city that really comes together and works together,” Jones said. “I think that it really speaks to San Antonio to say that we do have this largest march.”

The march is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 15. It begins at Martin Luther King Park, heads west and then ends with a post-march celebration at Pittman-Sullivan Park.

March lineup begins as early as 9 a.m. Dress warmly — forecasters warned of very cold weather gripping the region on Monday morning.

Participants can access free VIA bus service to the march from 8 to 10 a.m. at the Freeman Coliseum and St. Phillip’s College. Return service from the park to original pickup locations will last from 12 to 3 p.m.

Dreamweek

The march is the biggest of many events during San Antonio’s Dreamweek, which kicks off on Friday, Jan. 12. It’s 17 days of creating human interaction through civic engagement and embracing ideas for the common good.

Shokare Nakpodia, the founder of Dreamweek, said the theme this year is about a commitment for compassion.

“The theme is ‘the compassion drive’ we want to encourage as many individuals and organizations as possible to do a lot more to reach our goals in terms of taking care of our neighbors and taking care of our community,” Nakpodia explained.

Dreamweek will offer more than 200 events, including blood drives, discussions on anti-racism, science symposiums, and the Mayor’s Dream Ball event. More information is at Dreamweek.org.

Joey Palacios, Brian Kirkpatrick, Steve Short and Lauren Terrazas contributed to this report.

Fox San Antonio Dream Week 2024

DreamWeek 2024 embarks on its 12th year with a community-centered drive

By NEWS

SAN ANTONIO – Martin Luther King Jr.’s teachings inspired a 12th annual city-wide summit, “DreamWeek 2024: The Compassionate Drive.”

The Dream Week mission is to encourage a healthy exchange of ideas regarding real world issues in a civil manner.

Mayor Ron Nirenberg, District 1 Councilwoman Sukh Kaur and DreamWeek founder, Shokare Nakpodia are among the speakers for the press conference.