| George Wein (CAS’50), among the most
influential jazz impresarios of the twentieth century, is
also known for his promotion of social justice and racial
understanding. Extending that effort, Wein and his wife, Joyce,
recently made a gift of $1 million, initiating a fund to establish
a chair in the African-American Studies Program. The chair
will be fully funded when, through additional contributions,
it reaches the $2 million level.
The program offers a graduate degree and an undergraduate
minor, sponsors research, and presents public programs. Its
director, Ronald Richardson, summarizes: “Our overarching
mission is building people-to-people bridges across nations
and cultures.”
Founded in 1969 by Adelaide Cromwell (Hon.’95), now
a CAS professor emerita of sociology, the program “thrived
under her leadership,” said Richardson, a CAS associate
professor of African-American studies and history, at the
June 12 press conference announcing the Weins’ gift.
“It became one of the best programs in the nation. African-American
studies at BU has now adopted a new focus, reflecting developments
at home and abroad. Our reoriented program explores the African-American
experience in a global and comparative perspective. That means
uncovering connections between Americans of African descent
and other populations, both in the United States and around
the world.”
Richardson also announced that John Thornton, whom he called
one of the top historians of Africa in the world, and his
wife, African historian Linda Heywood, were joining BU this
fall. “Clearly, we’re on the move,” he said.
Wein, born in Lynn, Massachusetts, and raised in Newton,
stressed the importance of African-American studies in higher
education, and said that such programs “need support
everywhere.” He pointed out that in his BU days, when
he was taking premed courses largely because his father, Barnet
Wein (MED’20), was a doctor, he never dreamed that he
would be able to contribute to such a program in a meaningful
way. “I know that my family never thought I’d
be in a position like this,” he said with a laugh, “and
my friends never thought I’d be in a position like this.”
Once he realized as an undergraduate that he didn’t
want to pursue his father’s career path, he moved to
a different beat: jazz. (See
"All That Jazz") And that transformation led
him to become a “cultural innovator,” according
to the citation accompanying his 1999 lifetime achievement
award from the Da Capo Foundation and the Friends of the United
Nations.
With their gift to BU, the Weins continue to innovate and
to promote racial tolerance, said CAS African-American Studies
and History Professor Allison Blakely, who will be the first
holder of the George and Joyce Wein Chair. Blakely, a renowned
scholar of black history, is the author of Blacks in the
Dutch World: the Evolution of Racial Imagery in a Modern Society
(1994), and Russia and the Negro: Blacks in Russian History
and Thought (1986). A decorated Vietnam veteran, he taught
at Howard University for thirty years before joining the BU
faculty in 2001.
Wein has been fostering harmonious relations in the music
industry for half a century, said Blakely, citing as one example
his refusal to produce the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival
until the city had eliminated laws prohibiting integrated
audiences and performances. Wein’s promotion of jazz
has improved understanding among people of various cultures
and races, Blakely said, “and I think if our program
can emulate that in the academic sphere, we will have great
success.”
He thanked the Weins “for the faith they are demonstrating
in BU and in its African-American Studies Program, showing
that they have been convinced that we will advance the humanitarian
ideals of social justice, as they have done throughout their
careers. I’m pledging that we will be true to that trust.”
— Brian Fitzgerald
|