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Faust Travels to Selma for 50th Anniversary of March

President Drew G. Faust looks on as Pusey Minister in Memorial Church Jonathan L. Walton speaks. On Friday morning, Faust gave a speech during the morning prayers service reflecting on the time when she skipped her midterms as a college freshman to attend the voting rights march at Selma.
President Drew G. Faust looks on as Pusey Minister in Memorial Church Jonathan L. Walton speaks. On Friday morning, Faust gave a speech during the morning prayers service reflecting on the time when she skipped her midterms as a college freshman to attend the voting rights march at Selma.
By Theodore R. Delwiche and Mariel A. Klein, Crimson Staff Writers

University President Drew G. Faust traveled to Alabama this weekend for the 50th Anniversary of the Voting Rights March at Selma.

In Friday’s morning prayer service at Memorial Church, Faust, a civil war historian, discussed her own personal involvement in the Civil Rights movement.

President Drew G. Faust looks on as Pusey Minister in Memorial Church Jonathan L. Walton speaks. On Friday morning, Faust gave a speech during the morning prayers service reflecting on the time when she skipped her midterms as a college freshman to attend the voting rights march at Selma.
President Drew G. Faust looks on as Pusey Minister in Memorial Church Jonathan L. Walton speaks. On Friday morning, Faust gave a speech during the morning prayers service reflecting on the time when she skipped her midterms as a college freshman to attend the voting rights march at Selma. By Kamara A. Swaby

“I had felt the burden of that responsibility from the time I was small—growing up with the privileges of whiteness in the racial hierarchy of 1950s Virginia,” Faust said at the prayer service, adding that as a college freshman, she skipped her midterms to attend the 1965 march.

Invoking the poet Seamus J. Heaney, Faust talked about her previous experience at Selma as an opportunity to make “hope and history rhyme,” and said she planned to return to honor civil rights leaders including Martin Luther King Jr., Hosea L. Williams, James L. Bevel, Diane J. Nash, Andrew J. Young, Jimmie Lee Jackson, and John Lewis.

“No victory is absolute; we have to keep our eyes on the prize to hold on—even to the Voting Rights Act [of 1965] itself, which is being threatened and eroded at the same time we are celebrating its passage,” Faust said.

—Staff writer Theodore R. Delwiche can be reached at theodore.delwiche@thecrimson.com. Follow him on Twitter @trdelwic.

—Staff writer Mariel A. Klein can be reached at mariel.klein@thecrimson.com. Follow her on Twitter @mariel_klein.

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Central AdministrationRaceDrew FaustMemorial ChurchUniversityUniversity News