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</p><p>&#8220;I am &#8230; somebody! And so are you! Go, Black Matadors!&#8221;</p>
<p>That was how Africana studies professor and Director of the DuBois-Hamer Institute for Academic Achievement Cedric Hackett revved up the crowd in Matador Plaza on Feb. 1. Students, faculty and administrators gathered to celebrate the start of Black History Month — starting with the call-and-response made famous by the Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr.</p>
<p>After the exuberant greeting, Hackett began the program with a moment of silence for Tyre Nichols, a Sacramento native, whose brutal beating by Memphis police officers Jan. 7 was captured on videotape. Nichols died three days later.</p>
<p>&#8220;A brother, 29 &#8230; who could have been my son &#8230; who was brutally beaten and murdered by law enforcement,&#8221; Hackett said.</p>
<p>After the moment of silence, Hackett told the crowd that this year&#8217;s Black History Month theme at CSUN, &#8220;resistance,&#8221; mirrors the national theme.</p>
<p>&#8220;Oftentimes, when we think about resistance, we focus on depictions of fight, struggle and protest.&#8221; Hackett said. &#8220;Yet, there are some inalienable strengths embedded in resistance: persistence, defiance and existence.&#8221;</p>
<p>Marquita Gammage, chair of the Department of Africana Studies, welcomed the crowd to the kickoff event. She said Black History Month isn&#8217;t only about looking at the past, but also about looking to the future.</p>
<p>&#8220;Black History Month is about empowering us and challenging us to create a more equitable future, to create a more just and equitable society,&#8221; Gammage said.</p>
<p>Ryan Mason, the senior coordinator of The Black House and Student Support Services also welcomed all to the kickoff event and invited students to The Black House. &#8220;We look forward to engaging you in a lot of different programs over the next month but also over the years. Black History Month is only limited by your imagination,&#8221; Mason said.</p>
<p>The ceremony also featured a keynote speaker, alumnus Justin Marks, co-executive director of the Youth Justice Coalition in Los Angeles. Marks spoke frankly about his personal experiences with police, and law enforcement&#8217;s troubled history within communities of color and its lasting repercussions.</p>
<p>The Black History Month ceremony ended with roses handed out to all those who wanted to place one on the Matador statue — CSUN&#8217;s beloved &#8220;Tradition of the Rose,&#8221; when Matadors want to celebrate a significant milestone or achievement. Afterward, students, faculty and staff took photos in front of the Matador statue. Sophomore Anthony Turner, an Africana studies major, placed a rose on the statue and said Black History Month, for him, is about moving forward.</p>
<p>&#8220;This month, specifically, we&#8217;re given a time and space to be able to really dive deep and build unity among ourselves — to remember communally who we are and what we&#8217;ve gone through to get to this point,&#8221; Turner said.</p>
<p>The month-long campus celebration of Black history includes <a href="https://csunshinetoday.csun.edu/university-news/ready-to-celebrate-blac… packed schedule of events</a>, including a lecture by renowned author and scholar Nikole Hannah-Jones about her book, &#8220;The 1619 Project,&#8221; and a discussion with hip-hop pioneer Grandmaster Melle Mel.</p>

Black History Month Celebrations Begin, Themed: Resistance

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Black History Month

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&#8220;I am &#8230; somebody! And so are you! Go, Black Matadors!&#8221; That was how Africana studies professor and Director of...

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