The University of Massachusetts Amherst

Attendees in the background at South College with a poster in the foreground advertising the Reading Frederick Douglass Together event
Equity and Inclusion

HFA to Host Second Annual Mass Humanities Reading Frederick Douglass Together Event on Feb. 14

To commemorate Black History Month and the birthday of social reformer, abolitionist, orator, writer and statesman Frederick Douglass, the College of Humanities and Fine Arts (HFA) will host Reading Frederick Douglass Together on Feb. 14 at noon in the South College Atrium.

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Poster for Reading Frederick Douglass Together.

The event, held on Douglass’s birthday, is part of the Mass Humanities Reading Frederick Douglass Together grant program, which invites communities to host free, public readings and discussions of Douglass’s influential address, “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” UMass Amherst students, faculty and staff will gather to read passages from the address out loud and discuss its significance.

This marks the second year HFA has hosted its Reading Frederick Douglass Together event.

“I am thrilled that we are able to host this event again,” says Cara Takakjian, HFA associate dean of diversity, equity and inclusion. “Last year's reading had such a breadth of participants–staff, students and faculty–and was a moving experience for so many of us.”

Each year, Mass Humanities partners with the Community Change, Inc. of Boston, the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School, and the Museum of African American History to host a reading on Boston Common. Held near the monument to the 54th Regiment, the event attracts state legislators, students, and members of the public who take turns reading the speech.

Since 2019, Mass Humanities has also held an annual reading in Northampton, where residents gathered in the park outside the organization’s headquarters.  To learn more about Mass Humanities, visit masshumanities.org.