FORTY-NINE YEARS AGO
I was a
senior in college at Southwestern at Memphis (now Rhodes College) forty-nine
years ago . How can it have been so
long? Where did the time go? Who knows where the time goes, as Sandy Denny
once wrote in song. By this time in
1968, I had crossed over a bit from my captivity to race, and I was working in
the garbage workers strike. I was part
of a group of students who went to worship services at white churches and
interrupted their worship services to urge them to support the garbage
strike. I’ve often wondered what I would
have done if folks came in and did that at Oakhurst when I was pastor there!
I was also
involved with some of the first black students at Southwestern, some of whom
were involved with the Invaders, a group of young black adults in Memphis, who
were pushing for change and who felt that Martin Luther King, Jr., was not
realistic about the intransigence of white power, and thus he was increasingly
irrelevant. I was in the beginning of
my formation on these issues, and I felt caught intellectually. I had admired Dr. King for his witness
against the Vietnam War a year earlier, but he seemed increasingly ineffective
against the white power structure. I had
a chance to go hear Dr. King’s last sermon on April 3, 1968, at Mason Temple,
but to my everlasting regret, I declined because I did not think that it was
worth it.
About 6:30
PM the next night, one of my black colleagues found me as I came out of the
library and told me that Dr. King had been killed. My friend was seeking to raise money to buy guns for
self-protection, but fortunately, I had no money on me. If I had any money, I would likely have given
it to him, because I, like so many others at that moment, had lost belief in
the efficacy of nonviolence. I remember
the violence that broke out in Memphis and in so many other places, and I
remember the tanks and half-tracks that the Army and National Guard rode
through the streets of Memphis over the next few nights.
Over the
years, I’ve thought about those events a lot.
Though Dr. King was not the Civil Rights Movement, his assassination
seemed to take the air out of it.
Looking back, Dr. King turns out to have been an incredibly courageous
and radical-in-the-making, and though I do not believe that James Earl Ray was
the only one involved in his assassination (if he was involved at all), Dr.
King’s developing radicalism is undoubtedly what got him killed. We have also sought to
sanitize him and make him an American saint over the years, but we should
always remember that while he remained committed to nonviolence, by the end of
his life, he had come to believe that the American vision built on racism,
materialism and militarism had bankrupted our individual and collective
souls. He had come to believe that we
needed another American revolution. It was
that belief that made him dangerous and got him killed. In his fine book on Dr. King and Malcolm X (“Martin
and Malcolm and America”), James Cone had a fine insight on this kind of
movement. Dr. Cone indicated that Dr.
King had begun with love as his guiding principle and had moved toward justice
as the guiding principle. In a similar
movement, Malcolm X had begun with justice and moved towards love.
We are in a
mess in this country, and much of the reasons for this are the powers that Dr.
King and Malcolm X exposed in their ministries for love and justice. As we remember their lives and deaths and
their witness, and especially Dr. King’s on this day, let us re-commit ourselves
to the love and justice that drove them.
May it drive us also. I like
what my friend and colleague, the Reverend Magdalena Garcia, posted on her
Facebook page today: “Articles
about what happened to MLK's shooter? Frankly, I'm not interested. I want to
know what happened to the message!”
May we find and live the message.
I did not know Dr King was moving from Love to Justice while Malcolm X moved from Justice to Love. Growing up in white, conservative Lancaster County with no TV or understanding of the civil rights movement, Dr King made little impression on me while Malcolm X seemed like a radical fire brand. It was only later that I began to understand and appreciate both of them in their own right.
ReplyDeleteIt is difficult to remain true to Love and Nonviolence, when we want to see immediate results. It takes a lot of commitment to keep the faith despite circumstances.
Dave
Thanks, Dave - great comments!
ReplyDeleteIt's lovely to hear more about your formative years and how history shaped those! Also great to hear others talk openly about the radical nature of Dr. King- I feel he must gag, raise his eyebrows to the ceiling, and roll his eyes every time someone uses his sermons out of contest to encourage people to be silent and take it. Colin Kaepernick is a great example of calling attention to America's (and let's be frank: White America's) confusion and mixed messages on resistance and radicalism- he is famously pictured wearing a t-shirt that says "We march, y'all mad; we sit down, y'all mad; we speak up, y'all mad; we die, y'all silent." Let us continue to resist, use our voices to speak out on injustices, and keep Dr. King and other's vital messages at the top of the storyline!
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