The second annual Donning of the Kente ceremony at 草莓社区 included 14 students. Top row, from left: Jonae Guest, Lance Crawford and Eduardo Robles. Middle: Chinazo A. Nwankwo, Chidera T. Nwankwo, Mario Valladores, Fernando Sarmiento, Micah Shristi, co-director of Multicultural and International Student Services. Front row: Azariah Cox, Oksana Kittrell, Ezriona Prioleau, Carlos Garcia, Celeste R. Thomas, co-director of Multicultural and International Student Services, Maria Esther Showalter, adviser of Latino Student Alliance. (Photos by Ivan Harris)

Honorees don special stoles in preparation for EMU Commencement

草莓社区鈥檚 second annual Donning of the Kente Ceremony celebrated the accomplishments of students of color. The event, sponsored by and Black Student Union, was Thursday, April 19.

The Kente is a colorful cloth stole native to Ghana, said Celeste R. Thomas, co-director of and the event鈥檚 host. Kente was developed in the 17th century by the Ashanti people with roots in a long tradition of African weaving dating back to about 3000 B.C. Often reserved for special occasions or royalty, the stole is a visual representation of history, philosophy, ethics, oral literature, religious beliefs, social values and political thoughts.

Seniors at the 2016 Commencement ceremony wear Kente cloth stoles. Wearing a stole purchased or received during one’s cross-cultural experience has been a tradition for many years. (EMU file photo)

Last year was the first year of . Students will wear the Kente during commencement ceremonies this weekend.

Keynote speaker , professional director of James Madison University鈥檚 MBA Program, spoke about transitioning from being a student to starting a career. She encouraged the graduates to practice mindfulness as they prepare to enter the workforce. Ntiamoah, whose research interests include transition theory, gave several tips: take time to understand the work culture; have humility, be slow to form alliances and quick to network; get involved in the community and give back to their institution.

鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter what your context has been up to this moment, what hardships you may have had,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hat matters is the choices you make to go forward and how you choose to make that transition in your life.鈥

For the donning of the Kente, each student was joined on stage by an individual who had made an impact while at EMU. These friends, faculty or family members were invited to speak about the student and drape the stole across their shoulders.

The Kente recipients have already began giving back to EMU. Thomas read aloud their advice for underclass students.

Theatre major Ezrionna Prioleau encouraged students to 鈥渢ry something new and have fun while in school.鈥

鈥淒on’t give up!鈥 said Azariah Cox, who will graduate with a degree in photography and digital media. 鈥淭hings will try to knock you down, but don’t let it shape who you are. Achieve, achieve, achieve.鈥

Recipients of the Kente with their chosen speaker

Azariah Cox 鈥 Brian Simpson, head track coach

Lance Crawford 鈥 Professor Teresa Haas, director of the MA in Counseling program

Carlos Garcia 鈥 Will Stanley

Jonae Guest 鈥 Professor Deanna Durham, applied social sciences.

Oksana Kittrell 鈥 DeVantae Dews, co-president of Black Student Union

Chinazo A. Nwankwo 鈥 Chidera Nwankwo

Chidera T Nwankwo – Chinazo A. Nwankwo

Ezriona Prioleau 鈥 Professor Justin Poole, theater department

Eduardo Robles 鈥 Maria Esther Showalter, Latino Student Alliance advisor

Fernando Sarmineto 鈥 Maria Esther Showalter

Mario Valladores 鈥 Maria Esther Showalter

Also recieving the kente but not present for the ceremony were Diego Barahona, Natasha Buskey, Alexander Short and Julian Turner.