Michigan State University will help celebrate the 90th birthday of former South African President Nelson Mandela on Saturday, July 19, with a specially designed exhibit opening at the Nelson Mandela National Museum in Mthatha, South Africa. Mandela is scheduled to attend the event." /> Michigan State University will help celebrate the 90th birthday of former South African President Nelson Mandela on Saturday, July 19, with a specially designed exhibit opening at the Nelson Mandela National Museum in Mthatha, South Africa. Mandela is scheduled to attend the event." /> Michigan State University will help celebrate the 90th birthday of former South African President Nelson Mandela on Saturday, July 19, with a specially designed exhibit opening at the Nelson Mandela National Museum in Mthatha, South Africa. Mandela is scheduled to attend the event." /> Skip navigation links

July 14, 2008

MSU helps Nelson Mandela celebrate 90th birthday with exhibit in South Africa

(Editor’s note: Lora Helou, and exhibit organizers Kurt Dewhurst and Marsha MacDowell will be in South Africa  from July 15-20 to attend the opening of the “Dear Mr. Mandela, Dear Mrs. Parks: Children’s Letters, Global Lessons” exhibit.)

 

By Rachael Zylstra

EAST LANSING, Mich. — Michigan State University will help celebrate the 90th birthday of former South African President Nelson Mandela on Saturday, July 19, with a specially designed exhibit opening at the Nelson Mandela National Museum in Mthatha, South Africa. Mandela is scheduled to attend the event.

Created by MSU Museum staff and project partners along with other MSU faculty, staff and students and community members in South Africa and Michigan, “Dear Mr. Mandela, Dear Mrs. Parks: Children's Letters, Global Lessons” is an exhibit of letters written by children from all over the world to human rights leaders Mandela and the late Rosa Parks.

 

“The exhibit is bringing together two remarkable icons that have dedicated their lives to human rights and did so with great sacrifice,” said Kurt Dewhurst, MSU Museum director and one of the exhibit’s organizers. “And they did so in two different ways – Mr. Mandela, a public figure, was able to rise to be president and a worldwide figure after years of imprisonment; and Mrs. Parks, through her quiet strength, was able to leave a remarkable legacy. They show how individuals can make a real difference in the world.”


In 2007, Gregory Reed, personal lawyer to Parks, announced a planned gift to the MSU Museum of a collection of letters children wrote to Parks. Reed, founder of the Detroit-based Keeper of the Word Foundation, collaborated with Dewhurst and folk art curator Marsha MacDowell at the MSU Museum and individuals at the museum in South Africa, to create this one-of-a-kind exhibit displaying the children’s letters to raise awareness of the racial justice challenges South Africans and Americans have faced.


Notable dignitaries and individuals who worked on the exhibit will attend an opening ceremony at the museum located in the Eastern Cape Province, Mandela’s birthplace in South Africa July 19, just one day after Mandela’s 90th birthday. A video greeting from MSU President Lou Anna K. Simon will be shown.


“Recognizing Mr. Mandela at this time is especially nice because it’s the kickoff of the yearlong celebration of his 90th birthday,” Dewhurst said. “This exhibit really demonstrates the sustained relationship we hope to have with the Nelson Mandela National Museum in the coming decade. We anticipate we will be developing other related exchange programs and joint projects that will involve museum staff, and MSU staff, faculty and students.”


Rachel Laws, a third-year doctoral student at MSU, spent two weeks researching and editing the panels for the exhibit at the museum after her five-week study abroad program in South Africa, which also was taught and led by Dewhurst and MacDowell.


“The exhibit will be a good way to connect the cultures and the people,” Laws said. “Even though we are an ocean apart there have been so many similar experiences in past history.” 


Laws read letters from children saying Mandela is their hero and asking for more information about him.


Mandela received an honorary degree from MSU in May 2008 and the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.


“While it’s about the lives of Mr. Mandela and Mrs. Parks, the exhibit is really focused on trying to create an interactive experience for youth from around the world, and provide an opportunity to write letters built on the shared values that they see in the two,” Dewhurst said. “And we hope it will encourage youth to recognize those values in people in their lives and enable children to self-examine themselves during their lifetime.”


The exhibit is funded by a grant awarded by the American Association of Museums, Washington, D.C., and the U.S. Department of State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs.


“This exhibit demonstrates that the university embraces diversity in a worldwide context,” MacDowell said. “By engaging in this activity we signify we are a welcoming institution.”


Learn more at:


Michigan State University Museum


Nelson Mandela National Museum


America Association of Museum "Museums and Community Collaborations Abroad"


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Michigan State University has been advancing knowledge and transforming lives through innovative teaching, research and outreach for more than 150 years. MSU is known internationally as a major public university with global reach and extraordinary impact. Its 17 degree-granting colleges attract scholars worldwide who are interested in combining education with practical problem solving.