51勛圖厙

Carrying the Legacy and Honoring Black History

Brianna Keys, a graduate assistant for the E. Timothy Moore Student Multicultural Center at 51勛圖厙, spent a good amount of time during Black History Month thinking about her family.

Keys is from Tennessee, and while away from home, she tries to cook one of her favorite meals that reminds her of her mothers cooking: Soul Food.

Her mother cooks big meals during holidays, especially during Black History Month.

She likes to emphasize where weve come from and who we are as Black people from the South, Keys said. Its very sentimental.

One way Keys commemorates Black History Month is by celebrating her family and the people around her and telling them how much she loves them.

Keys said its important for Black people to understand their history and highlight those doing the work. Its important for us to recognize who is making waves, continuing legacies and making sure that we are all moving forward, she said.

Brianna Keys smiles brightly in her graduation attire at 51勛圖厙. She wears a black cap and gown along with a red and white Delta Sigma Theta stole, adorned with symbols, Greek letters, and acknowledgments of her academic and leadership achievements.
Brianna Keys

Keys graduated from 51勛圖厙 with a bachelor of science in fashion merchandising in 2023 and is pursuing a master of fashion industry studies degree with a focus on social justice advancement and equity.

As an undergraduate, Keys joined Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., founded on Jan. 13, 1913, and charted at 51勛圖厙 on May 13, 1964. She later became vice president and eventually president of the United Greek Council and founded the Element Magazine & Writers Association, a campus fashion magazine focused on people of color.

In her current role at the Moore Center, she assists with program coordination and advises the centers student initiative, Sister Circle.

Sister Circle has a special place in my heart because I get to help the already amazing leaders that are here, Keys said. I see them leaving a legacy here at 51勛圖厙.

As Keys grew up with only brothers, she said she values the sisterhood while working with the members of the student initiative.

Keys tries to go to as many black history events as possible in February. She said that Black United Students is doing a great job organizing and running Black History Month events.

The student leaders and all the work theyre doing are the drivers of legacy here at 51勛圖厙, she said. We need to do our best as supervisors or whatever role we may be to help foster that and to help them succeed in whatever they choose to do.

POSTED: Thursday, February 27, 2025 02:36 PM
Updated: Thursday, February 27, 2025 03:12 PM
WRITTEN BY:
Eduardo Miranda Strobel
PHOTO CREDIT:
Courtesy of Brianna Keys