Debra Mitchell-Braxton has been organizing Martin Luther King Jr. Day events for 30 years. She is adamant that today is "a day on, not a day off," she said Sunday afternoon.
King's "whole philosophy is to serve others and for there to be equality," she said.
For today, she has helped organize a handful of events celebrating King and his legacy. But he remembers the first breakfast she planned, in 1979, that drew just 25 people. Over the years, the annual breakfast, once hosted at Southeast Missouri State University, drew as many as 1,200.
She hopes to see that many at 8 a.m. today in the Osage Community Centre. But she knows there are many opportunities for people to celebrate King's legacy, including a community unity walk from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. from the Show Me Center to the Joyful Praise Church of God at 1507 S. Sprigg St.
"I'm glad other people are showing interest and they want to be a part of something instead of taking a day off," she said. "We've got to come together as a unified community."
She said this year's celebration, coming on the eve of president-elect Barack Obama's inauguration, shows that "we are going to have a changed nation. Whoever you are, whatever the color of your skin, you can achieve."
The events she helped plan for today at the Osage Centre are free, but organizers hope to see canned goods and nonperishable items donated to help replenish area food banks, as well as donations to the Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship Fund.
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