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King at The Carver Library: A Book Signing & Meet and Greet with Arndrea Waters King promotional image
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King at The Carver Library: A Book Signing & Meet and Greet with Arndrea Waters King

Literature Discussion Martin Luther King Day

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Join SAAACAM and Arndrea Waters King at The Carver Library, 3350 E. Commerce on Sunday January 19th at 11am for A MEET AND GREET and a signed copy of the new book “What Is My Legacy”.

Arndrea Waters King is an advocate, thought leader, and uniter in the movement for peace, justice, and equity. She gained significant experience working within the anti-hate movement at the Center for Democratic Renewal, an organization founded and headed by Dr. C.T. Vivian, a lieutenant of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. During her tenure, Arndrea organized the first National Conference on Hate Crimes and Hate Violence with over 100 national partners. With hate crimes on the rise and an increasingly divided country, she is a leading voice in the anti-hate movement with substantive knowledge of hate speech, hate crimes, and the various organizations promoting hate and division.

The new book “What Is My Legacy: Realizing A New Dream of Connection, Love, and Fulfillment” which she co-authored with her husband Martin Luther King III is an answer to the challenges of a world burdened by histories of violence, oppression, racism, poverty, fear and disconnectedness.

Martin Luther King III has carried the weight of his father’s legacy—and his dream of a Beloved Community built on justice, love and equal rights for all, and in this project Martin has teamed up with his wife and fellow activist, Arndrea Waters King, and legacy architects Marc Kielburger and Craig Kielburger to find a new way forward. Drawing on breakthroughs in neuroscience, psychology, epigenetics and their own lived experiences, they have created a groundbreaking new framework called Living Legacy.

A ticket IS required for this free event.

Join SAAACAM and Arndrea Waters King at The Carver Library, 3350 E. Commerce on Sunday January 19th at 11am for A MEET AND GREET and a signed copy of the new book “What Is My Legacy”.

Arndrea Waters King is an advocate, thought leader, and uniter in the movement for peace, justice, and equity. She gained significant experience working within the anti-hate movement at the Center for Democratic Renewal, an organization founded and headed by Dr. C.T. Vivian, a lieutenant of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. During her tenure, Arndrea organized the first National Conference on Hate Crimes and Hate Violence with over 100 national partners. With hate crimes on the rise and an increasingly divided country, she is a leading voice in the anti-hate movement with substantive knowledge of hate speech, hate crimes, and the various organizations promoting hate and division.

The new book “What Is My Legacy: Realizing A New Dream of Connection, Love, and Fulfillment” which she co-authored with her husband Martin Luther King III is an answer to the challenges of a world burdened by histories of violence, oppression, racism, poverty, fear and disconnectedness.

Martin Luther King III has carried the weight of his father’s legacy—and his dream of a Beloved Community built on justice, love and equal rights for all, and in this project Martin has teamed up with his wife and fellow activist, Arndrea Waters King, and legacy architects Marc Kielburger and Craig Kielburger to find a new way forward. Drawing on breakthroughs in neuroscience, psychology, epigenetics and their own lived experiences, they have created a groundbreaking new framework called Living Legacy.

A ticket IS required for this free event.

More about San Antonio African American Community Archive and Museum
SAAACAM is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization formed to collect, maintain, disseminate and interpret authentic African American artifacts related to San Antonio history in a community-based digital archive. The organization’s goal is to illuminate San Antonio’s Black history by empowering individuals to curate their own archives and cultivate a community-driven museum of digitized and audiovisual exhibits. The development of the community archive is ongoing. SAAACAM is the proactive steward of cultural and physical preservation of historic African American resources.
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