Volunteer initiatives involved church and community members in Coatesville, Pennsylvania.
The city of Coatesville, Pennsylvania, United States, celebrated Martin Luther King (MLK) Jr. Day in a different way than most on January 15.
Celebrations began with an Edmund Pettus Bridge reenactment, where individuals from the community marched through the town, stopping at various points to commemorate different aspects of the Civil Rights movement, especially surrounding the events of the historical marches from Selma to Montgomery in Alabama.
In honor of the 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act, the Coatesville community leadership, with strong support from residents, banded together to carry on King’s legacy by not only speaking about change, justice, and advocacy but also by emphasizing the day of service and providing ample opportunities to serve.
As a tribute to King’s housing initiative that he began in November of 1967, the W. C. Atkinson Memorial Community Service Center, an Adventist outreach center, in partnership with many other organizations including Good Works and Adventist Community Services, started a home renovation project on January 2. The goal was to complete the project by MLK Jr. Day.
It was the sixth home renovation project in Coatesville spearheaded by the W. C. Atkinson center. These homes are provided for unhoused veterans in the community and have been a blessing to the city of Coatesville for years.
“It is a very difficult job to gut a house and try to get it back together in the short space of time that we did,” house renovation project director Walter Harris explained. “It was not anything of my own doing that I would take on this project, but I believe that God will be able to sustain us as we go through with it. And He brought some awesome volunteers to work with us and kept us going in the demolition of it — and then the next part of it [in] putting it back together.”
During the afternoon of Coatesville’s MLK Jr. Day celebrations, there was a soft opening and open house for the renovation project as a celebration of what God had done in the substantial progress toward completion of the home renovation project.
Being the Change
Minnie McNeil, a former ACS director for the Columbia Union Conference of the Seventh-day Adventist Church, who now serves as vice president for the W. C. Atkinson Memorial Community Service Center, stated, “We are intentional about celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. Day of service here in Coatesville because there were so many instances [of] disparity. There was racism here in Coatesville.”
In 1927, physician W. C. Atkinson was on his way to New York to accept a job offer when he stopped by Coatesville to visit a friend and fellow Howard University graduate, an Adventist professor named T.J. Anderson. Seeing the needs of Coatesville, Atkinson only worked in New York for a couple weeks before he went back to help the people of Coatesville. Upon his return, he was unable to practice medicine because he was African American, so he built his own hospital. The hospital is now the community service center that continues to serve the community in numerous ways.
Special Delivery
In addition to the commemorative events the town of Coatesville held on January 15, the Atkinson center also hosted a special service day event, the creation of care packages for veterans. Students from area high schools as well as other Coatesville community members joined together in writing encouragement cards and filling small gift bags with care essentials and hygiene products.
In seeing the students from a couple of school districts as well as students from Lincoln University assisting in the care package assembly, Donna Rowland, local area National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) president, observed, “That’s starting the next generation. That’s called ‘next generation leaders,’ and we’re showing them how to be. As community leaders, we have to continue to motivate the people in the community and let them know why it’s important. We can’t do it alone. So, when we come together and we bring our strengths, we bring our resources, that helps make change in our community.”
Walter Murray, a local nurse who also volunteers at the Atkinson center to help with health education and men’s support groups, said, “I think that, based on what Martin Luther King stood for, I think this is a perfect day to show particularly our veterans who are homeless as well that we just want to give back … on Martin Luther King Day.”
NcNeil, reflecting on the day of service, said, “MLK Jr. Day is very special in terms of recognizing the times where we were, the progress that has been made; and the opportunity today is all about the opportunity to make a difference going forward.… It foreshadows a dream that Martin Luther King had, that together we could make a difference.”
The original version of this story was posted on the North American Division news site.