Mark Twain Museum to Sponsor Anti-Racism Workshop
Last Updated on Wednesday, 02 March 2011 17:20 Wednesday, 07 July 2010 15:15
The Mark Twain Boyhood Home & Museum will host an
“Awareness and Understanding of Systemic Racism” workshop on Friday, August 27
from 9:00-3:00 at the Museum Gallery.
Community Partnership for Reconciliation (CPR), a diverse group of
citizens working to eliminate racism and its residual destructive impact, is
sponsoring the event. The workshop
will be facilitated by a national team with a 39-year history of working
towards racial justice and reconciliation.
The Museum’s role in preserving Twain’s legacy includes
explaining how a boy from a slave-holding home and community could “unlearn”
beliefs instilled during childhood and grow up to write Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain’s anti-racism, anti-slavery
treatise and generally regarded as his masterpiece.
“We like to ask ourselves, ‘What would Mark Twain do?’”
said Cindy Lovell, executive director of the Museum and a member of CPR, “and
we believe he would support any effort to reduce racism and promote harmony,
especially here in his hometown.”
Many people do not know that Twain secretly paid the tuition of a gifted
black student at Yale when he learned the student held three jobs and lived
with the school’s carpenter just to be able to pay tuition. That student, Warner T. McGuinn, went
on to become a lawyer and president of the NAACP in Baltimore where he later
mentored a struggling young, black lawyer: Thurgood Marshall.
Pastor Minnie Smith, a founding member of CPR, agrees that
collaborative efforts like this are critical in community building. “I have taken this workshop in the
past,” she said, “and they do an excellent job. We hope that other community leaders will join us in our
endeavors. The outcomes are always
very positive.”
Toto Rendlen, another founding member of CPR, agreed. “We have to lead by example. This is not a ‘preachy’ approach, but a
realistic investigation into confronting our own perceptions about those who
are different from us. It is a
uniquely personal experience.”
There is no cost for the workshop, although a $10 donation
is appreciated. Space is limited
to 40 adults. Continental
breakfast and lunch are provided.
Please call the Museum at 573-221-9010, ext. 401 to reserve a place.






