
Three win Martin Luther King Jr. awards
Connecticut College honored three members of the campus community Feb. 1 with the 2017 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Service Awards, conferred each year on those who exemplify and uphold the legacy of Dr. King's work.
The awards were presented at a Black Heritage Month kickoff event, “Young, Gifted and Black.” The ceremony featured a keynote speech by Young Alumni Trustee Chakena Sims ’16, a previous winner of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Service Award, as well as remarks by Dean of Institutional Equity and Inclusion John F. McKnight Jr. and Dean of Religious and Spiritual Life Claudia Highbaugh. There were also performances by Derrick Newton ’17 and Verdi Degbey ’20.
The 2017 honorees are:
Nathalie Etoke, associate professor of French and Africana studies and chair of the French Department
“Professor Etoke has been a force to reckon with on this campus,” Erin Duran, director of the LGBTQIA Center, said while announcing Etoke as a nominee for the award at the ceremony. “She definitely represents a young, gifted and black intellectual.”
Etoke has been a professor at the College since 2009. She is the author of several books and the writer and director of Afro Diasporic French Identities, a 2012 documentary about the relationship between race and citizenship in the French sociopolitical context.
Lamiya Khandaker ’17
Khandaker also serves on the College’s Government Student Advisory Board and is a resident blogger for the Between Arabs Project, which brings together Arabs of all faiths and Muslims of all ethnicities to discuss social issues and taboo subjects within Arab and Muslim communities.
In 2015, Khandaker interned at DoSomething.org, a not-for-profit organization that aims to motivate young people around the globe to take action on causes they care about most. As a discriminations campaign intern, she formulated and pitched campaigns to engage youth in social action to improve their communities.
Shameesha Pryor ’17
Pryor also volunteers at the New London Senior Citizens Center and serves as a student mentor at Jennings Elementary School. In her hometown of Chicago, Illinois, Pryor serves as a program intern for Young Chicago Authors, an organization that aims to cultivate young voices through writing, publication and performance education.
“As a student leader, Shameesha is the embodiment of commitment to the progress of black people on campus and in the New London community,” Pansy Nguyen ’19 said while announcing Pryor as an award nominee. “No matter the platform, Shameesha prioritizes education and action surrounding social justice.”
During the ceremony, all of the nominees for the awards were recognized. In addition to the winners, the nominees were: Barbara Hogate Ferrin '43 Professor of Economics Candace Howes, Veronica Alejandro ’18, Ousmane Dia ’18 and Derrick Newton ’17.
February 9, 2017