Wesley Robinson-McNeese was taught as a young child to
disregard boundaries.
He grew up as a member of an East St. Louis church,
the same church that later introduced him to a world outside the
impoverished city’s streets and instilled in him the drive to make a
difference. He entwined his faith and his desire to help others, becoming a
pastor and an emergency physician.
He lives and works by the belief that life
wasn’t meant to be homogeneous.
“To be honest with you, diversity and unity is
not just what I do, but it’s who I am,” McNeese says.
As executive assistant to the dean for Diversity,
Multicultural and Minority Affairs, McNeese recruits students of varied
backgrounds to the Southern Illinois University School of Medicine. As the
president of the Springfield Ministerial Alliance, McNeese encourages
spiritual leaders of all races and faiths to join the once traditionally
black organization.
He helped orchestrate the inauguration of 2008 as the
Year of Reconciliation to commemorate and move forward from the race riots
of 1908. This weekend his poem, “Face to Face,” will open Paint it Red, a production
featuring the lives of those involved in the riots.
McNeese now seeks to transform his own church —
the New Mission Church of God, which he founded in 2003 at the Washington
Street Mission — into a hub of diversity.
“I have so much wanted to have a multi-racial
congregation,” McNeese says. “I want to see blacks, whites,
Latinos and people all cultures worship together, and I want to see it
under my pastorate. That’s what I want so much I can taste
it.”
Even his license plate symbolizes his mission. It
reads Umoja,
Swahili for “unity.”
Nina Harris, president of the Springfield Urban
League, met McNeese three years ago and has since worked with him on
several initiatives, including a health-career expo for high school
students. When it came time to choose a keynote speaker for the
league’s 82nd annual anniversary awards dinner, she knew McNeese
would be the perfect fit — especially since its theme is
“United We Stand: Empowering Communities and Changing
Lives.”
Harris calls McNeese a true leader with a
servant’s heart, and has asked him to address the concept of unity
and how it applies locally, in the Springfield community, and nationally,
on the heels of the national election.
The community connects with McNeese, Harris adds, not
only because of his warm personality, his smooth baritone voice and his
ability to converse with people on all levels, but also because of his own
modest beginnings.
“It is the mission of the Urban League to assist
African-Americans, other emerging ethnic groups and those who struggle to
attain self-sufficiency,” Harris says. “Dr. McNeese, having
hailed from a humble childhood and a humble background, most certainly can
identify with individuals who struggle.
“Given his accomplishments and his career, he
has also dedicated himself to assisting individuals to recognize the
courage to do better.”
The Springfield Urban League’s 82nd annual
anniversary awards dinner and meeting will begin at 5:30 p.m. Nov. 7 at the
Springfield Hilton. Call 789-0830, ext. 102 to reserve tickets.
Contact Amanda Robert at arobert@illinoistimes.com
This article appears in Oct 30 – Nov 5, 2008.
