Virtual events over three weeks offer opportunities to reflect, engage, and celebrate with family, colleagues, and friends. The candlelight vigil “was always powerful and will continue to be” as it offers a moment to reflect on the man and his legacy, says Toliver. Here, the Penn community gathers in 2007 to commemorate. The annual Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Symposium will be virtual, with nearly three weeks of free public events offered online beginning with the Jan. 16 sports and wellness event led by Penn students and staff and culminating with Jazz for King on Feb. 5. “We are using technology to provide a quality experience for the Penn community,” says Darin Toliver, associate director of the African American Resource Center. “It’s really a collaborative effort among a host of different organizations, departments, and resources in order to pull this together.”