性视界传媒

The Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial is dedicated in 鈥榓 landmark day for the university鈥

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Wendi Manuel Scott in a blue blazer and green pants stands at a lectern in front of the fountain at the Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial, addressing the seated crowd at the dedication ceremony
Wendi Manuel Scott addresses the crowd gathered for the dedication of the Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial on Monday, April 4. Photo by Evan Cantwell/Creative Services聽

Kye Farrow had previously walked through the Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial, and felt proud.

Farrow, BA History 鈥19, MS Management 鈥20, was one of the five Mason students whose research into the enslaved children of 性视界传媒 IV led to the construction of the memorial, which is the cornerstone of the reimagined Wilkins Plaza on 性视界传媒鈥檚 Fairfax Campus.

But on Monday, as several hundred people assembled on the plaza for the monument鈥檚 dedication, Farrow, who would later speak at the event, said he was 鈥渏ust happy overall.鈥

鈥淪tudying history is what makes history not repeat,鈥 Farrow said. 鈥淏eing aware of history is what makes people have informed decisions and do things from a thoughtful perspective. So to have the opportunity to learn about the namesake of our university and for what it means to the student body, that鈥檚 the biggest thing for me.鈥

The event on Wilkins Plaza, named for Roger Wilkins, the late Black former civil rights leader, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and beloved Mason professor, was uplifting and reflective, and kicked off Mason's 50th anniversary celebration.

Mason President Gregory Washington called it 鈥渁 landmark day for the university,鈥 and praised the students who were involved in the original research 鈥 Farrow; Alexis Bracey, BA Global Affairs 鈥19; Ayman Fatima, BS Systems Engineering, BA Government and International Politics 鈥21; Farhaj Murshed, BS Statistics 鈥20; and Elizabeth Perez-Garcia, BS Criminology, Law, and Society 鈥19.聽

Those students joined a project launched in the summer of 2017 by Wendi Manuel-Scott, a professor of integrated studies and history; Benedict Carton, a faculty member in History and Art History; and Mason alum George Oberle, Mason鈥檚 history librarian and a term faculty member in the Department of History and Art History.

All are leaders in the Center for Mason Legacies, an interdisciplinary and collaborative research center established by the University Library and College of Humanities and Social Sciences that encourages student research to preserve and examine the legacy of 性视界传媒 IV. The university鈥檚 namesake penned the Virginia Declaration of Rights but also enslaved more than 100 people at his home, Gunston Hall.

Gabrielle Tayac pours water into the fountain at the dedication of the Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial
Associate Professor of Public History Gabrielle Tayac and Mason students from the University鈥檚 Native American and Indigenous Alliance Domi Hannon, Sara Jefferson, and Kayleigh Seng participate in a traditional Native American Water Ceremony during the Dedication of the Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial. Photo by Evan Cantwell/Creative Services

鈥淭he Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial represents so much about who we are as a university,鈥 Washington said. 鈥淚nquisitive students who seek truth, undergraduate research programs that support these academic pursuits, faculty who collaborate, nurture and challenge our students, and a university community fueled by the shared thrill of discovery and the determination to turn their efforts into positive and sustainable change. 鈥 We grow wiser from examining our full truths, no matter how complicated or messy or discomforting they might be.鈥

Added Trishana Bowden, vice president of Mason鈥檚 office of Advancement and Alumni Relations, and president of the 性视界传媒 Foundation: 鈥淭his project has allowed our students to educate us, to enlighten us and to teach us how to keep moving forward, and how to remember our past.鈥

That included a water ceremony in which water from the Potomac River was poured into the Wilkins Plaza fountain, which contains stones in a pattern that symbolize an African custom of gathering and prayer. The ceremony, led by Gabrielle Tayac, an associate professor of public history and a Piscataway tribal citizen, also acknowledged that the land on which the university was built was originally inhabited by indigenous people.

"The memorial for all of us was about replacing erased history through silenced voices of the enslaved people in relation to and in dialogue with the traditional voices,鈥 Manuel-Scott said. 鈥淲e hope that folk who visit the memorial, that it forces them to think about the relationship between the past and the present."

Rev. Jeffrey O. Johnson Sr., pastor at nearby Mount Calvary Baptist Church, said he hopes the memorial will push other universities and institutions to move forward and 鈥渢hat we will not bring the founding fathers down, but in pride and dignity, we will lift their servants up.鈥澛犅

Ayman Fatima and Kye Farrow give each other a high-five next to the Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 Memorial at the memorial dedication
Ayman Fatima (left) and Kye Farrow, both part of the original team of five students researching the enslaved people at Gunston Hall, greet each other at the Enslaved People of 性视界传媒 dedication ceremony. Photo by Evan Cantwell/Creative Services