Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Vision Awards

martin luther king, jr.

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Vision Awards

In 2018, and in remembrance of the 50th anniversary of the assassination of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Providence College established the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Vision Award. This annual award honors individuals or groups who exemplify his teachings and spirit. 

The selection committee considers nominees whose scholarship, community engagement, leadership, or service to others have advanced one or more of the principles which Dr. King embodied: social justice, advocacy, equality, human rights, the promotion of faith, and freedom of all people.

The nomination period has closed. Award winners will be announced in January 2025.

Past Recipients

2024

Colby Brown ’24

Colby Brown ’24

Co-Founder, First Generation Investors (Rhode Island Chapter)
Secretary, Friars Club

Colby Brown ’24 is a management major and sociology minor from Tewksbury, Massachusetts, and co-founder of the Rhode Island chapter of First Generation Investors, a national non-profit empowering high school students to take ownership of their financial futures. He is a tutor for First Generation Investors’ eight-week financial education program at Nowell Academy, a public charter high school in downtown Providence serving pregnant and parenting young adults. Brown is secretary of Friars Club, a member of the Academic Affairs Student Advisory Council, and a peer mentor in the School of Business. He has interned with Cape Abilities, a Cape Cod-based service organization for people with disabilities, and he designed DEI mentoring programs with a British tech start-up while studying abroad in London. In partnership with the Donald Ryan Incubator for Entrepreneurship, Brown is engaged in a consulting project with the car brand Hyundai Genesis, advising on corporate social responsibility strategy. In his sociology research, he makes strategic recommendations for how PC can enroll and better support students of color from the Providence area.


Kerri Murray '95

Kerri Murray ’95

President, ShelterBox USA

Kerri Murray ’95, based in Santa Barbara, California, is a tireless advocate for victims of disasters and conflict. For the past eight years she has been president of the global humanitarian relief organization ShelterBox USA, a nonprofit that provides customized emergency shelter kits to displaced people. The boxes contain water purification kits, blankets, solar lanterns, tents, and more. She has led ShelterBox through a significant expansion of its humanitarian efforts and personally worked in conflict and disaster zones, including Morocco and Ukraine. Under her leadership, ShelterBox has been twice nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Before entering the nonprofit sector in 2009, Murray spent 13 years as a healthcare leader at GlaxoSmithKline, working in the U.S. and Europe on vaccines, women’s health, anti-infectives, and cardiovascular disease. She was board president of GIRLS ROCK, a music education nonprofit for young girls, for six years. Murray grew up in Naugatuck, Connecticut. As a Providence College student, she worked for the Rhode Island Public Defender, taught ESL, and was the first lobbyist for Save the Bay.


Rev. James Ruggeri '90

Rev. James Ruggieri ’90

Pastor, St. Patrick & St. Michael’s Parish
Founder, St. Patrick’s Academy

Rev. James Ruggieri ’90 has been the pastor of St. Patrick Parish in Providence since 2003 and was named pastor of St. Michael’s Parish in 2020. A native of Barrington, Rhode Island, he earned a bachelor’s degree in religious studies from Providence College and a master’s degree in theology from St. Mary’s Seminary and University in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1994. He was ordained a priest on June 24, 1995, by Most Rev. Louis E. Gelineau, D.D., bishop of Providence. Before coming to St. Patrick’s, he was an assistant pastor at St. Matthew’s Church in Cranston, All Saints Parish in Woonsocket, and Holy Spirit Parish in Central Falls. In 2009, with help from parishioners and supporters, he founded St. Patrick’s Academy, a Catholic preparatory high school for students unable to enroll in other Catholic schools for financial and other reasons. There is not set tuition; families pay what they can afford. The school enrolls 25 students per grade for a maximum of 100 students. Twenty percent are first-generation immigrants.

Read About the 2024 Recipients

2023

Anderson Clary '69

The career of Rev. Dr. Anderson W. Clary Jr. ’69 spans five decades, with accomplishments in education, banking, gerontology, social services, political activism, and theology.

A native of Newport News, Virginia, where he attended elementary and high school, Rev. Clary came to Providence College to study secondary education. He played basketball under Coach Joe Mullaney ’65Hon, ’98Hon. and captained the team his senior year. He studied in PC’s graduate program in biblical studies from 1982-84. He holds master’s and doctoral degrees in sacred scripture from Canaan Theological Seminary in Hampton, Virginia.

Among his many honors and recognitions, he received the national Jefferson Award for his counseling work with inner-city youth and their parents and for his contributions to neighborhood improvement in the areas of economic and business development. He was appointed by Governor Tim Kaine as chair of the Virginia Governor’s Commission on National and Community Service.

Learn more about Clary >

Justin Babu '23

Justin Babu ’23, from East Meadow, New York, has been a leader on equity issues throughout his time at Providence College. A secondary education/biology major, he serves on the Diversity Committee for the School of Professional Studies. As an independent study, he researched the college’s institutional policies on diversity, equity, and inclusion and their impact on the campus climate, and oversaw the project’s transition to an interdisciplinary lab.

Justin was a member of the Honors Program and led a peer study group leader for the Department of Biology. He holds weekly office hours for General Biology students, conducts ad hoc tutoring and mentoring, and introduces students to lab operations. 

Learn more about Babu >


2022

Richard Gomes Jr

Richard Gomes Jr., assistant volleyball coach at PC since 2019, has worked to mentor and encourage young people of color since his early days playing and coaching volleyball in New Bedford, Mass. At PC, Gomes serves on the PC Athletics Inclusion Committee and participated in the Black Student Athlete Summit in 2020 and 2021. In 2019, he was chosen to receive the national American Volleyball Coaches Association Diversity Award. Gomes has been instrumental in the success of the PC team, helping it achieve a 7-3 conference record in the 2020 season (played in the spring of 2021), which led to the BIG EAST Coaching Staff of the Year Award. 

Brianna Harper

Brianna Harper ’22 (Troy, N.Y.) is president of the Footprints Gospel Choir and a mentor for Black Girl Magic, a program that mentors middle school girls in Providence, and Horizons, the support organization for multicultural students. Harper is a member of the Cheerleading Team and serves on the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Subcommittee of the Student Athlete-Advisory Council. She has participated in Friar Serve and is a Dirigo Honor Society inductee. A biology major, she researches and studies predatory and prey bacteria with Dr. Laura Williams and is a teaching assistant for microbiology.

Learn more about Harper >

Joseph N. Small Jr

Joseph N. Small Jr. ’74, a Martin Luther King Jr. Scholarship recipient, studied English at PC. While working in computer software publishing for Pearson Education and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, he promoted IT solutions to address the “interrupted formal education” experienced by children in migrant camps in Florida and the Carolinas. After his retirement in 2018, he began a career as an actor, voice artist, narrator, and producer in southeastern Massachusetts. A member of the Screen Actors Guild, he has produced short-form programs to create awareness of DEI and LBGTQ+ causes. His stage name, Joe Collymore, is a tribute to his great-grandfather, who emigrated from Guyana.

Learn more about Small >

Em Teixeira ’22

Since arriving at Providence College, Em Teixeira ’22 (Newark, N.J.), a biology major, has been a member of S.H.E.P.A.R.D. (Stopping Homophobia, Eliminating Prejudice, and Restoring Dignity), the college’s LGBTQ+ support and advocacy organization. As a member of the executive board since 2019, Teixeira helps to plan and host events intended to educate the PC community on LGBTQ+ issues and facilitate Safe Space Trainings for student leaders, faculty, and staff. Teixeira is a mentor in Peer Mentoring Program, which supports first-generation college students, and is treasurer of the Board of Multicultural Student Affairs.


2021

Saaid Mendoza, PhD

Dr. Saaid Mendoza was born in Chihuahua, Mexico, and moved to the United States at the age of 2. Despite not speaking English, his parents moved the family to Phoenix, Ariz., in search of more opportunities for their children. Their sacrifices and his identity as an immigrant in a predominantly white suburb helped shaped Dr. Mendoza’s passion for education and interest in race relations. His academic journey first led him to Houston, Texas, where he attended Rice University and won the William C. Howell Undergraduate Research Award. He then moved to New York City, where he earned his Ph.D. in Social & Organizational Psychology from New York University in 2010 and received the Stuart W. Cook Award for Graduate Research.  
After four years at Amherst College, he joined the full-time faculty of the Department of Psychology at Providence College. He is the principal investigator of the Social Perception & Attitudes Lab, which trains undergraduates in how to conduct experimental research on intergroup biases. As a Riccobono Academic Resilience Faculty Fellow, he is an advocate for raising mental health awareness and reducing its stigma in his classes. As a faculty-in-residence for the Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, Dr. Mendoza provides educational talks across campus, consults on assessment initiatives, and helps oversee DEI training opportunities for students, faculty, and staff. He lives in Cranston, R.I., with his wife, Jenny, and their two children, Vivi and Mason.  

Learn more about Mendoza >

Christina Roca ’21

Throughout her time at Providence College, Christina Roca ’21 has been involved in student advocacy work. She has been a dream coach for the Transitions Pre-Orientation program for the past three years, serving as a mentor for first-generation and students of color in their transition to college. She was a co-facilitator of a global service-learning course, Global Border Crossings in Tijuana, Mexico, during Spring 2019. Roca not only helped lead the class but also spearheaded fundraising efforts and facilitated on-site reflections.  

In the Fall of 2019, she studied abroad in Rabat, Morocco, through the School for International Training’s Migration and Transnational Identity Program. As president of the Providence Immigrant Rights Coalition student club at PC, Roca works with fellow members as an advocate for students on campus who are from immigrant families. At the end of her junior year, she was inducted into the Alpha Kappa Delta Sociology Honor Society. 


2020 

Dr. Terza Lima-Neves ’00

Dr. Terza Lima-Neves ’00 is associate professor of political science and chair of the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Johnson C. Smith University, a historically black college in Charlotte, N.C. A native of Cape Verde who moved to Pawtucket, R.I., with her family, she received the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholarship to attend PC, where she studied political science. She is co-founder of the Poderoza Conference, the first international conference on Cabo-Verdean women in the United States. She also founded the Cabo Verdean of the Carolinas Association. She holds a master’s degree and a Ph.D. from Clark Atlanta University. Her research and scholarship focus on international politics, global gender studies, and the modern African diaspora in the United States. She is married and the mother of two children.

Learn more about Lima-Neves >

Jack Murphy

John “Jack” Murphy ’20, a social work and Spanish double major from Brunswick, Maine, has been involved in service since his arrival at Providence College. He was awarded a Father Philip A. Smith, O.P. Fellowship for Study and Service Abroad to spend the summer of 2018 in Rivas, Nicaragua, with the Dominican Friars, teaching English and environmental awareness to students. In the summer of 2019, he received a Veritas grant to intern with Progreso Latino in Central Falls, R.I., and helped organize the “Lights for Liberty” rally at the State House. He volunteers as a student escort and bilingual tutor at Harry Kizirian Elementary School in Providence, serves meals at a local men’s shelter, became a peer minister for students studying abroad, and took part in a Global Service and Solidarity course trip to Guatemala. He has applied for a Fulbright fellowship to teach in Paraguay. 

Learn more about Murphy >

The Organization of Latin American Students is a campus-based, student led organization whose goal is to make LatinX students feel at home at Providence College. Founded in the 2008-09 academic year, OLAS has sponsored events to create a more inclusive culture on campus. Each year, the organization hosts a Latin Expo and a Día de los Muertos celebration. Its Café con Leche series supports and facilitates conversation about race, mental health, disability, gender, and religion in a safe and open forum. The board members strive to be dedicated, passionate, and hardworking leaders who advocate for social justice, equality, and universal freedom for underrepresented groups across campus. 


2019 

Jillian Rose

Jillian Rose ’04, who majored in social work and health policy & management at PC, is the director of community engagement, diversity, and research at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York City. In 2018, she received the Distinguished Educator Award from the Association of Rheumatology Health Professionals for her work training health professionals to improve care and to change outcomes for patients of color. Rose has master’s degrees in public health and social work. She is a doctoral candidate in health education at Columbia University. 

Learn more about Rose >


2018 

father shanley presenting mlk award to dr. mckay

The first MLK Vision Award was presented to the late Dr. Francis P. MacKay, retired associate professor of chemistry and former vice president for academic administration, and posthumously to Dr. Rene M. Fortin ’55, professor of English; Dr. Mark Rerick, professor of chemistry; and Rev. Robert A. Morris, O.P. ’46 & ’82Hon., former executive vice president and the first director of the MLK Scholarship Program. The four faculty members and administrators founded PC’s Martin Luther King Scholarship Program in 1968 to honor Dr. King’s legacy by providing opportunities for black students to attend PC. Faculty contributed a portion of their salaries to the fund by payroll deduction. Eventually, the College matched their efforts and raised additional money.