Civil rights leader and non-violent activist the Rev. James Lawson will speak at ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ University this month as part of the University Seminar in Religion and Culture.
Lawson, Distinguished University Professor at ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ and a fellow at ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ’s Center for the Study of Religion and Culture, will speak at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, April 11, in Benton Chapel on the ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ campus.
The lecture is free and open to the public. A reception will follow.
Lawson’s lecture is titled “Moving Ourselves from Unknown Peril to Noble Vision.”
Lawson is spending the current academic year at ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ, the school that expelled him in 1960 because of his work advising civil rights protestors in Nashville. His return to ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ has been featured by media across the country.
Lawson continues to teach non-violent techniques for social change and is the pastor emeritus of Holman United Methodist Church in Los Angeles. ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ’s University Seminar in Religion and Culture is presented by the university’s and supported by a gift from Burt Bogitsh, emeritus professor of biology at ²¤ÂÜÊÓÆµ, and his family in honor of Mafoi Carlisle Bogitsh.
Media contact: Jim Patterson, (615) 322-NEWS
jim.patterson@vanderbilt.edu