February is Black History Month
In 2026, we mark 100 years since Dr. Carter G. Woodson’s call to redefine our nation’s engagement with and inclusion of Black history. We reflect on the ways Black people have memorialized and reimagined these collective histories: through scholarship and storytelling, through the arts and activism, through ritual, healing, and community-building. We seek offerings that illuminate the unbroken line between our ancestors’ labor and the world we inhabit today—a world built, in countless visible and invisible ways, by Black hands, hearts, and brilliance.
You can join in the celebration through an exciting calendar of events from the Office of Multicultural Involvement & Community Advocacy (MICA).
Check out the full Black History Month calendar and join in!