Staff Writer
Crowds of people gathered outside All Saints’ Chapel minutes before 11 a.m. when the doors opened to let in the congregation for Convocation. Once inside, people lined up in chairs against the walls due to the large influx of families, friends, and colleagues of the students to be gowned. Sewanee students know the drill: organ melodies call in the academic procession and the congregation stands and sings. The choir sings “Ecce Quam Bonum,” beginning with, “behold how good and joyful a thing it is: brethren to dwell together in unity!”
Awards and prizes were given to 35 students and were announced by Provost John Swallow. A full list of awards can be viewed on the University website. Victoria Miglets (C’17), recipient of the Atkins-Rogers Textbook Award for History, expressed that she felt Convocation was “a great manifestation of Sewanee’s most unique tradition.”
In addition, honorary degrees were bestowed upon Sir Fazle Hasan Abed, received an honorary Doctor of Civil Law, the Rt. Rev. Rayford, received an honorary Doctor of Divinity, and the U.S. Poet Laureate Charles Wright, received an honorary Doctor or Letters. Sir Abed, founder of the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC), the world’s largest nonprofit organization that provides services to poverty stricken people in both Bangladesh and beyond, delivered an inspiring Founders’ Day address in which he emphasized the importance of providing tools for these individuals to gain control in their lives. He reflected on the effects of BRAC and related its values to Sewanee’s values, specifically calling upon the “life of value” Sewanee students aim to uphold.