His journey featured in a Hollywood film, Lesra Martin helps recognize students who improve Black lives
At age 15, Lesra Martin was poor, illiterate and navigating a tough inner-city New York neighbourhood.
But his life changed forever after a chance encounter with a group of socially minded entrepreneurs who offered to take care of his education. With their backing, Martin moved to Canada, completed high school and earned a degree in anthropology from the 91³Ō¹Ļ.
Today, Martin is a highly respected civil lawyer in Kamloops, B.C., a writer and motivational speaker ā and he wants to pay it forward.
At 91³Ō¹Ļās Innis College, where he was a student, he has helped establish , which recognizes the efforts of students whose scholarly achievement or extra-curricular initiatives contribute to Black excellence and inclusion.
āEducation has been the key to my future,ā Martin says. āWhen I was a young boy, I couldnāt read or write at the age of 15. Because of the help and kindness of some strangers who came into my life from Toronto, I went on to obtain an education ā that no one could take away from me ā and become a lawyer.ā
Martin is perhaps best known for helping bring about the release of imprisoned boxer Rubin āThe Hurricaneā Carter, a campaign he began as a teenager. After hearing Carter's story, Martin began corresponding with the boxer ā who was convicted of a triple-murder but had maintained his innocence ā before visiting him in prison.
Convinced of Carterās innocence and inspired by his courage, Martin urged his Canadian foster family to help him fight for the boxerās release. They were ultimately successful, with Martinās involvement in the case depicted in the 1999 movie The Hurricane, starring Denzel Washington as Carter and featuring Vicellous Reon Shannon as Martin.
Vicellous Reon Shannon (left) plays Lesra Martin opposite Denzel Washington as Rubin āHurricaneā Carter in the 1999 film The Hurricane (photo By Getty Images)
Between his Canadian mentors and Carter, Martin says heās been fortunate to receive guidance and inspiration from unlikely places.
āThey literally changed my life,ā Martin said. āI wanted to be able to give something back because of what these strangers did for me, and I thought the Changemaker Award would be an awesome way to start.ā
Charlie Keil, principal of Innis College, says the award ā valued at around $1,000 for each recipient ā was created as the college looked to re-examine how it was serving Black students in the wake of the murder of George Floyd and the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement.
āOut of that was born the Black Student Experience Working Group at Innis, and a series of conversations with Lesra Martin about how best to recognize Black students who are making a difference,ā Keil says.
āLesraās commitment to social justice and the value of education, particularly for Black students, helped fuel this initiative. The Changemaker Award is designed to reflect Lesraās values, while also shining a light on the formidable achievements Black students are making on and off-campus.
āI am so proud of Francisca Wiafe-Amoako and Kassia Neckles, the inaugural recipients of the award, as they epitomize the engaged Black students that we want to see celebrated.ā
Wiafe-Amoako, who graduated this spring, founded 91³Ō¹Ļās , a student club that offers Afro-dance workshops and promotes African diasporic culture through music and dance.
She says she was actively involved in Afro-dance and cultural programs in high school but couldnāt find a club specifically geared towards her interests when she reached university. So, she decided to start one herself in 2019.
āMyself and other students who Iād spoken to were very interested in having a space where we could enjoy listening and dancing to Afro-beat music,ā she says. āThat was the motivation ā the desire to fill a gap that we felt was missing on campus.ā
Originally set up as a dance-focused initiative, the club has since evolved to include activities such as discussions on a range of topics pertaining to African and Black culture.
āItās become like an all-round cultural hub for us,ā Wiafe-Amoako says. āSo many students have benefitted from the networking that it has provided, and the safe space it has provided for us to enjoy our culture and share our culture with others who arenāt from that background.ā
This fall, Wiafe-Amoako will move to Baltimore to pursue a masterās degree in nursing at Johns Hopkins University. But she hopes the Afro-Dance and Culture Club will continue to reach new heights.
āEven though I created it, it wasnāt just āsomething Francisca likesā ā itās something multiple students expressed an interest in, so the longevity of the club would be a great testament to the fact that this club was something people really wanted,ā she says. āI would love to come back and visit 91³Ō¹Ļ in 10 to 15 years and see the new generation of the Afro-Dance and Culture Club.ā
The Afro-Dance and Culture Club performs in 2019 at Innis College as part of a benefit concert to raise money for refugee students (photo courtesy of Innis College)
For Wiafe-Amoako, winning the Lesra Martin Student Changemaker Award capped off a momentous month that also saw her graduate from 91³Ō¹Ļās Faculty of Arts & Science with a double major in neuroscience and physiology, as well as a minor in Spanish.
She was also selected to represent Innis College as a divisional ambassador during 91³Ō¹Ļās virtual spring convocation.
āI feel like Iām on cloud nine,ā she says. āThere are so many Black students who are doing things and having great impacts in their communities, but donāt receive recognition for the work that they do. So, itās been really affirming and I feel really privileged not just to be a recipient of the award, but one of the inaugural recipients.ā
Neckles, a fourth-year Innis student majoring in cinema studies and English, was recognized with the award for her publications analyzing race, representation and portrayals of Blackness in film.
In Filmdaze, an independent publication, on her upbringing and identity. The film is about a young Black girl preparing to compete in the National Spelling Bee.
āI saw so many echoes of myself in Akeelah that it was almost overwhelming,ā Neckles wrote in Filmdaze. āJust like me, Akeelah was unambiguously Black, wore glasses, and was opinionated and honest. This was the first time I watched a coming-of-age film in which I felt seen and, as a result, my own coming-of-age felt validated. For once, the love I had for this medium was reciprocated.ā
Neckles says that, as a film student and Black woman, sheās long been interested in portrayals of Blackness in film ā or the lack thereof.
āI would not go as far as saying that the representation of Black people in film will enact systemic change, but I do think it is nonetheless important and potentially transformative for Black people to be able to see themselves on screen,ā she says.
Neckles says the Lesra Martin Student Changemaker Award reaffirmed her commitment to boost Black voices in film and media.
āIt can be very easy for me to undermine my efforts and work as inconsequential ā both as a single person in a world of billions and as a Black person in a world so rife with anti-Blackness,ā she says. āThis award, in a sense, assures me that my efforts to support my community and inspire change are not entirely futile.ā
Neckles adds that she hopes future recipients of the award will be provided with a similar boost for their own ambitions.
āI am only an inaugural recipient of this award, which means that there will be so many more recipients after me who will be rightfully recognized,ā she says.
āAwards like these ā that not only award people in name but monetarily ā are examples of meaningful support that can contribute to real changeā¦ I cannot wait for this award to help more people.ā
Going forward, Neckles says she plans to graduate next year, and plans to continue pursuing her education, film journalism and creative writing.
āMy ultimate goal is to create content that gives voice to Black people, whether that is through films, novels, or otherwise,ā she says. āWhatever I end up doing in life, I just want to make sure I am helping others and supporting my community ā even if in a small way.ā
Martin says both Neckles and Wiafe-Amoako are a testament to the energy, creativity and optimism of the next generation.
āThereās something going on now in our society where young people are beginning to recognize that they have a role to play, and theyāre finding their voice more and more,ā he says. āI think theyāre beginning to recognize that itās important for the rest of society to hear their opinions and hear what they have to say.ā
Martin adds that he hopes the award will help its recipients in their endeavors and inspire them to lend a helping hand to others.
āI hope that everyone who ultimately receives this award will, at some point in their lives, have the opportunity to pay it forward, embrace it, make the best of it ā and keep on keeping on.ā