Charles Long Jr., a 43-year-old who was once in and out of jail and experienced homelessness, graduated cum laude from UC Berkeley and won the University Medalist award, the highest honor given to a graduating senior.
He was once in and out of jail and experienced homelessness. He was once a part of a revolving system that took him in and out of jail, with stints of homelessness and days of just trying to survive, and on Saturday, 43-year-old Charles Long Jr. marked a proud, major milestone in his life, not just graduating from one of the most prestigious universities in the world, but receiving his diploma with the highest honor awarded to a graduating senior at UC Berkeley.
Long was recognized as this year’s University Medalist. Candidates of the long-running award must have achieved a grade point average of at least 3.96.
"A medal and $2,500 are awarded to the most distinguished graduating senior on the UC Berkeley campus," according to theWith a 4.0 GPA, the sociology and social welfare double major was chosen for the honor as he was recognized as an exceptional student who brought and used his past and his life experiences into his academic journey as he worked to make an impact since his first day stepping onto campus. Receiving the award, Long delivered a powerful and emotional speech before about 7,000 graduating students, their family and friends at California Memorial Stadium.
He began his address by talking about what it means to be an "organic intellectual," referencing Italian philosopher Antonio Gramsci, who introduced the concept in his writings from a prison cell.
"Organic intellectuals are thinkers, scholars and activists grown from the soil of the communities they come from. They don't study to escape their communities, but to understand, represent and serve them," Long said, adding, "They turn experience into insight, insight into action and action into a better world.
""Your experience at Berkeley has always come with a responsibility to the families and the communities that you come from. I see you. I see all of y'all," he told his fellow graduates, who burst into cheers. Long said he once believed that his past, his experiences were ones that didn’t allow him to step into a space like Berkeley.
But during his time at the university, he’s learned otherwise.
"When I arrived here, I carried a story that I thought would disqualify me from places like this," Long said as he choked up and got emotional. "Now that story is one of my greatest assets. "Long grew up in the Bay Area and even from a young age, he said he would always identify UC Berkeley as his dream school if he could attend any university. When he was 1, Long’s dad went to prison.
He told UC Berkeley News that his early memories were marked with images of his father calling from prison and his mother in a drug rehabilitation program that placed him and his siblings in foster care. that when he was 5, during a conversation with his dad who was calling from prison, he shared that he wanted to be a social worker one day.
An arrest when he was 18, placed him on a cycle that would be hard to break from. The arrest, he said, happened in Milpitas the day before he was set ship off for the Navy. He was leaving an area not far from where a fight had broken out. Police wrongly assumed that he was a part of the fight and arrested him on suspicion of felony assault.
"I thought they were going to let me go once they realized that I was not at the fight," Long told UC Berkeley News. But he wasn't cleared of the charges, and prosecutors instead offered him a deal to plead guilty to a lesser charge. While Long did not want to take the deal, he had seen what had happened to his father when he was given an option to take a one-year jail sentence after his arrest.
"I had been in jail so long, when they offered a plea deal to let me out, I just took it," Long said in a video that was shared at the graduation. He maintains his innocence and said, "Once you're in the system, it’s really hard to get out.
" At one period during his time out of jail, he experienced homelessness in San Jose after his family moved away from the Bay Area to Las Vegas. Living in encampments, Long would be subject to homeless sweeps.
"Being associated with other people with criminal records, or merely living in an area of suspected drug use, were violations of his parole," UC Berkeley News wrote. This cycle continued until he reevaluated his life with the birth of his daughter. The dad said he wanted to live as an example for his child. At age 37, he went back to school attending community college at Moreno Valley College in Riverside County, and then he eventually transferred.
Helping those incarceratedWhat they're saying: "Charles is by far one of the most outstanding students I have ever had the pleasure of working with during my 23 years of teaching," Behbehanian shared with KTVU in an email.
"He is exceptionally brilliant and passionately committed to supporting his fellow formerly incarcerated students, particularly through his extensive work with Berkeley Underground Scholars," Behbehanian said. She said as part of his honors thesis research, Long looked at the profound effects of tutoring and other mentoring programs in prisons.
"His work focuses on how this kind of volunteer work in prisons has the potential of fueling what he calls ‘empathy recovery. ’ He supplemented this with further research mapping out the higher educational programs operating in prisons across the nation.
"And now that he's graduated, he wants to take a gap year and travel to Africa, with plans to further his academic journey and apply to Ph. D. programs. In his address, Long told his audience that he leaves UC Berkley with more than a degree. He leaves with a powerful and inspiring sense of hope to make the world better.
But he also cautioned about letting their education give them a false sense of certainty. He said he learned early on that a Berkeley education does not exempt him from the systemic societal challenges that have always been there.
"During my first year here, a police encounter at a social justice conference left me face down against the concrete with a shattered tooth," he recounted in his speech. "The empty space in my smile is a constant reminder that credentials alone cannot protect us from injustices. "And the 2026 University medalist challenged his fellow graduates to use the soil of the communities they come from, the tools they've gained from their education and "make something grow.
""Whatever you do with the opportunity Berkeley has placed in your hands, let it be great. Not because it makes you important but because it makes life better for someone else," he said.
"Let your work build doors where someone else only saw walls. "And he closed with a message of unity and action in a world where differences make us who we are. "The world does not need us to agree on everything. It does need us to remember that we belong to one another," the graduate said.
"We share a responsibility to leave people more free, more safe, more seen and more loved than we found them," Long said. "And when doors close around you, because some will, don’t be afraid to build your own.
Then hold that door open so someone else can walk through it.
" Heart transplant patient receives diploma in special graduation ceremony 20-year-old Spencer Rollins received his diploma at a special ceremony at Lucille Packard Children's Hospital. He has been awaiting a heart transplant for 227 days and attended a special school at the hospital. Information for this story came from UC Berkeley News, the university's website, video of the commencement, and KTVU's correspondence with Laleh Behbehanian and UC Berkeley's media relations team.
University Medalist 4.0 GPA Antonio Gramsci Organic Intellectuals Homelessness Jail
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Turning Point USA founder's assassination sparks conservative activism at UC BerkeleyTurning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk's assassination has led to an increased conservative activism on UC Berkeley's campus, with emerging chapters helping students break out of their shells and feeling more confident in expressing their views. However, tensions persist as conservative views are often overshadowed by more liberal voices, particularly on California campuses.
Read more »
UC Berkeley undergrads celebrate commencement with keynote by professor emeritus and 'University Medalist'UC Berkeley undergraduate and graduate students of the Class of 2026 were the focus of the campuswide commencement ceremony held at the University of California, Berkeley campus. They celebrated during the ceremony held at California Memorial Stadium. The keynote address was delivered by Professor Emeritus Robert Reich. Charles Long, a Sociology and Social Welfare double major with a 4.0 GPA, delivered the keynote speech. He spent years cycling in and out of jail and homelessness as a young man before transferring to Berkeley from community college.
Read more »
Berkeley, a Look Back: City’s newest financial building opened in May 1926Also that month, the City Council rezoned the corner of Grove (now Martin Luther King Jr. Way) and Cedar streets for commercial use.
Read more »
Ex-Santa Clara County jail guard sentenced to jail for allowing inmate attackFrancisco Castillo was convicted of battery in a 2022 inmate ambush at the Elmwood men’s jail, after being accused of giving attackers access then covering it up.
Read more »
