01/17/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 01/17/2026 04:29
To mark the 2026 observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, Newsroom has compiled a selection of stories highlighting the university's archival materials on the late civil rights iconand the ways in which his life and work have inspired social justice and teaching at UCLA.
When Martin Luther King Jr. spoke at UCLA
UCLA
Martin Luther King Jr. speaking at UCLA in 1965, about a month after his triumphant march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.
UCLA Library's Special Collections holds important artifacts of UCLA's history. The film clip of Martin Luther King Jr. speaking on campus in 1965, combined with audio discovered by people in the communications studies department reveals more about what is was like on that day, and just how many students were there to hear his message of justice.
Listen to King's full speech on the UCLA Communications Studies YouTube channel.
UCLA hosts historic performance with origins in the life, legacy of MLK
In 2023, UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music faculty Arturo O'Farrill and Diane White-Clayton premiered original works alongside a performance of jazz icon Dave Brubeck's "The Gates of Justice," a cantata composed in the aftermath of King's 1968 assassination to address increasing tensions between Jewish and Black communities.
Learn more about how UCLA's "music and justice" concerts connect to King's message of hope.
King's teachings passed from one of his contemporaries to UCLA undergraduates
Graphic by Tina Ly/UCLA. Photos by UCLA and UCLA Labor Center
For over two decades, the late Rev. James Lawson Jr. inspired students to carry on the fight for justice in his course that explored nonviolent theory and its impact on social movements in the U.S, and around the globe.
Learn about how the nonviolence class connected students to King's enduring legacy.
Chaos or community? Professors reflect on Martin Luther King Jr.'s final message of hope
In 2021, members of the UCLA faculty shared their thoughts on King's last published work, a treatise on the slain civil rights leader's vision of the ongoing struggle for economic equality, educational equity and freedom for all Americans regardless of race.
Hear from scholars across campus about what King's writings meant to them.
Archival papers show bond between UCLA's Ralph Bunche and Martin Luther King Jr.
UCLA Library Special Collections
Ralph Bunche with Martin Luther King Jr. and Coretta Scott King.
UCLA Library's Special Collections house a unique personal statement from Bunche on King's assassination, three telegrams and letters the UCLA alumnus and Nobel Peace Prize-winner wrote to support and congratulate King during his lifetime.
Learn more about why the collection is an important Bruin legacy.
Video collection honors Martin Luther King Jr.'s contributions and legacy
The UCLA Film & Television Archive houses 100 moving image holdings relevant to the study of the iconic civil rights leader, including newsreels and TV documentaries like "King in the Wilderness," which chronicles the final chapters of King's life.
Learn more about the collection and how to access some of the content online.
UCLA professors reflect on the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr.
UCLA
Clockwise from top left: UCLA's Brenda Steveson, Marcus Hunter, Lorrie Frasure-Yokley, Tyrone Howard, Kelly Lytle Hernández and Darnell Hunt.
In 2018, six Black faculty members reflected on the themes in King's final manuscript and discussed the role that UCLA could play in advancing the spirit, hopefulness and boundless effort that King continues to inspire.
Watch them speak to King's agenda of equality and justice on the 50th anniversary of his assassination.