| Cecil
J. Hunt II P'03 MLK Assembly Speaker |
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January 15 , 2003
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On Wednesday, January 15, Associate Professor of
Law Cecil J. Hunt II P’03, was the keynote speaker at the
Martin Luther King assembly.
Mr. Hunt traced the history of lynching in America, emphasizing
that lynchings were considered entertainment by many white Americans
who came from church or even with picnic fare to get a good view
of the spectacle.
“It is tempting to consider these aberrant events,”
Mr. Hunt said, “[but] the more than 3,000 black people lynched
are as much victims of terror as those 3,000 people who died on
9/11.
“It is not ancient history,” he told students.
Professor Hunt told students that it would have easier and far safer
for King to avoid taking on the problems of racism and segregation,
but he chose to work for change. “He armed himself with nothing
more powerful than non-violence,” Mr. Hunt said. “He
taught us that truth is a powerful weapon.”
He also told students to recognize that “whiteness has a cash
value” and that white privilege comes from a system that has
included unequal education, insider networking and lack of access
to home mortgages for blacks. “The past has a living effect
on the present,” he said. “Generations and generations
of black people have been anchored [to the socioeconomic bottom].
“Martin Luther King told us to stop letting color blind us…so
that we may see the humanity and dignity of all people. [He wanted
us to make] a society that can live with its conscience,”
Hunt said.
Professor Hunt also told students that their generation would be
the first to grow up in an America in which whites are not the majority.
He asked students to consider how they will manage that challenge:
Where will their children go to school? Where will they live? How
will they vote?
Their choices, he told them, will help determine whether the American
experiment of democracy works—whether the rest of the world
looks to us as a model and for inspiration, or as a failure like
the communist system.
“The jury is still out,” he said.
Since 1977, Cecil Hunt has been an associate professor at Suffolk
Law School in Boston. He received a bachelor’s degree from
Harvard University in 1975 and a doctorate of law from Boston College
in 1980. Professor Hunt specializes in race and the law; real estate
transactions; contracts; jurisprudence; and banking and commercial
law.
In 2002, Hunt visited the Academy to educate students on racial
profiling at Seminar Day.

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