Skip to content
Home » Chadwick Boseman’s Speech at Howard University 2018 Commencement (Full Transcript)

Chadwick Boseman’s Speech at Howard University 2018 Commencement (Full Transcript)

Here is the full transcript of actor Chadwick Boseman’s speech at Howard University 2018 Commencement ceremony on Saturday, May 12 in Washington, D.C.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

Opening Acknowledgments

First, giving honor to the Creator and my ancestors on whose shoulders I stand. Happy Mother’s Day to my mom; she is not here in attendance, but by tomorrow, she will have seen this. Let me also acknowledge my professors who have passed on to the other side. Because of work obligations over the past few years, I missed memorials that were held here for them.

Professor Al Freeman Jr., Professor Mike Malone, Professor Reggie Ray, Dr. Henrietta Edmonds, Professor Joe Selman, Dr. Johnson, and Dr. Singleton. Professors and instructors that may be present, George Epstein, Tony Starnes, Denise Saunders, Professor Roberts Williams, and Professor Vera Katz, your lessons continue to guide and enlighten me to this day. To President Wayne Frederick and the Board of Trustees, thank you for bringing me back here and giving me this distinguished award. It’s overwhelming to be recognized amongst this year’s other honorees.

Returning and Reflecting

I can think of no better place to be right now after the Black Panther and Avengers campaigns than to return and participate in these graduation ceremonies with you. It is a great privilege, graduates, to address you on your day, a day marking one of the most important accomplishments of your life to date. This is a magical place, a place where the dynamics of positive and negative seem to exist in extremes. I remember walking across this yard on what seemed to be a random day, my head down, lost in my own world of issues like many of you do daily.

I’m almost at the center of the yard. I raise my head and Muhammad Ali was walking towards me. Time seemed to slow down as his eyes locked on mine and opened wide. He raised his fist into a quintessential guard.

A Memorable Encounter

I was game to play along with him, to act as if I was a worthy opponent. What an honor to be challenged by the GOAT, the greatest of all time, for a brief moment. His face was as serious as if I were Frazier in the “Thrilla in Manila.” His movements — his movements were flashes of a past greater than I can imagine.

His security let the joke play along for a second before they ushered him away. And I walked away floating like a butterfly. I walked away amused at him, amused at myself, amused at life for this moment that almost no one would ever believe. I walked away light, ready to take on the world.

The Hilltop Experience

That is the magic of this place. Almost anything can happen here. Hey, Q! Howard University. I was riding here and I heard on the radio somebody call it Wakanda University, but it has many names, the Mecca, the hilltop.

It only takes one hour, one tour of the physical campus to understand why we call it the hilltop. Every day is leg day here. That’s why some of you have cars. During my junior and senior years, I lived in a house off campus at Bryant Street.

Challenges and Triumphs

For those of you who don’t know what that means, that’s at the bottom of the hill where the incline gets real. Almost every day I would walk the full length of the hill to Fine Arts, where most of my classes were, carrying all of my books. Once you walk that far on foot, you’re not walking back home until it’s time to go home for good. But beyond the physical campus, the hilltop represents the culmination of the intellectual and spiritual journey you have undergone while you were here.

You have been climbing this academic slope for at least three or four years. For some of you, maybe even a little bit more. Throughout ancient times, institutions of learning have been built on top of hills to convey that great struggle is required to achieve degrees of enlightenment. Each of you had your own unique difficulties with the hill.

Academic and Personal Struggles

For some of you, the challenge was actually academics. When you hear the words “Magna Cum Laude,” “Cum Laude,” you know that’s not you. That’s not you. You worked hard, you did your best, but you didn’t make A’s or B’s, sometimes C’s.

You never made the Dean’s List, but that’s okay, you’re here on top of the hill. And I want to say something to that. You know, sometimes your grades don’t give a real indication of what your greatness might be. So it really is okay.

For others, it was financial. You and your family struggled to make ends meet every semester of your matriculation. You had to stand in one line to get to another line, to get to another line for somebody that might help you. You had to work an extra job or two, but you’re here.

Social and Psychological Challenges

For a lot of you, not all, but a lot of you, your hardest struggle was social. Some of you never fit in, you were never as cool and as popular as you wanted to be, and it bothers you. So your social struggles here became psychological. Even though you made it up the hill, you carried the baggage of rejection with you, but you’re here.

Or some of you went through something traumatic. You made it to the top of the hill, but not without scars and bruises. Some of you fit in too much. You were on the yard rapping on your frat block when you were supposed to be in class.

ALSO READ:  Full Transcript: Neil Gaiman Commencement Speech to the University of the Arts Class of 2012

Embracing the Journey

Or you got caught up in the DC party life. I know how that is. I mean, we’re right here in the midst of the city. Sometimes you forgot you were in school. You probably could have graduated with honors, but instead, you were getting an “oh yeah” degree today.