Former Bryn Mawr President, Pennsylvania Senator Brought MLK Day of Service to Life

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Former Sen. Harris Wofford and former President Barack Obama.
Former Sen. Harris Wofford receives the Presidential Citizens Medal, the nation’s second-highest civilian honor, for his exemplary life of public service from President Obama in 2013.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day is seeing a significant rise in community service participation around the country as hundreds of thousands of Americans flock to local organizations, churches, and schools to honor the legacy of the legendary civil rights leader, writes Briana Thomas for The Washington Post.

Established 31 years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. Day became Martin Luther King Day of Service in 1994. The change happened thanks to two other civil rights leaders and King’s colleagues, former Pennsylvania Senator Harris Wofford and Georgia Representative John Lewis.

The two men co-authored the King Holiday and Service Act, which established the January 15 holiday as a national day of service. This made King’s commemorative day the first and only federal holiday that is also a day of service.

For over twenty years the largest event in the country honoring King has been the annual Greater Philadelphia King Day of Service directed by Wofford’s former state office director, Todd Bernstein.

“Everybody can be great, because everybody can serve,“ said King in his 1968 sermon. “You only need a heart full of grace, a soul generated by love.”

Read more about the amazing turnout around the country at The Washington Post by clicking here.

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