I found this blog entry yesterday -- impressive how easy is to make Clojure programs parallel (pmap in place of map :D ). Sadly, on my PC it didn't run on multiple cores but I haven't investigated it yet.
Use examples from books like Joy of Clojure -- they are very idiomatic and well designed. In this book there are also reasons on design of language and -- what is most important to you -- why functions+immutability is better for multithreaded programming than procedures+OO mutability.
Yes, I think parallelism is important to tell. But also -- in my opinion -- it is always crucial to convince non-lisp-listeners that The Parentheses Hell is not a hell but blessing ;) Tell about Beating the Averages and why Lisps are the most powerful languages in the world.
Try not to teach them a language but show why to learn it.
Oh, and prepare that someone in the audience will ask "why no for loop" or "why no constants" or "how come immutability doesn't lead to performance problems".