As workers applied the finishing touches to the University of Virginia’s Memorial to Enslaved Laborers early last year, the coronavirus pandemic cancelled the plans for a spring dedication event that would bring people together.
A year later, a virtual ceremony, free and open to the public, will be held Saturday to honor the legacy of the estimated 4,000 enslaved people who built and maintained UVA between 1817 and 1865.
The official dedication ceremony will be broadcast at 11 a.m., featuring a range of speakers, including alumni who first proposed the idea for the memorial, descendants of the enslaved, students giving a spoken word performance and UVA leaders and others who’ve worked on and supported this project.
Later that evening, the a capella group Take 6 will perform a concert online at 7 p.m. Originally from Huntsville, Alabama’s Oakwood College, where the group formed in 1980, Take 6 – with the six original singers – has won 10 Grammy Awards, two NAACP Image Awards, 10 Dove Awards and more.
The performance is presented by the UVA IDEA Fund, a group of alumni and friends formed in 2010 to advise and support the University’s Division of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion. (IDEA stands for “inclusion, diversity, equity and access.”) There will be a Q&A session with Take 6 after the concert.

