“MLK”
I don’t
remember when I first heard of Martin Luther King, Jr. Those of you who read my recent article in
The Atlantic about my engagement with him in 1968 know that he was and still is
a very important figure in my life. My
earliest memory as a boy about him is my thinking that he was a Communist, a
money-seeking agitator who was duping black people and even some white
people. My earliest memory of him was
seeing him on a billboard near Marianna, Arkansas, near my hometown of
Helena. He was sitting in a rocking
chair with an older white man next to him, with a caption reading something
like “King trained at Communist school.”
As I’ve written in other blogs, I later learned that the older white man
was Myles Horton, and the “Communist school” was the Highlander Folk School in
east Tennessee. It was the same place
where Rosa Parks was trained the summer before she refused to give up her seat
on the bus in Montgomery in December, 1955.
Where did I
learn this terrible stuff about Dr. King?
I don’t remember anyone sitting me down to lecture me on the dangers of
believing that those classified as black were equal to those classified as
white. It simply was “in the air,” in my
southern white culture as a boy. Those
of you who read this blog regularly know that I love the phrase “the prince of
the power of the air” from the New Testament Letter to the Ephesians. I breathed in this racism from those who
loved me, and from those I loved. I was
receiving it and agreeing with it long before I became aware of it.
I first
really engaged Dr. King when he gave his famous “I Have a Dream” speech in
August, 1963. I was a rising senior in
high school, but our school had not yet started back up after summer vacation. I listened by myself, and I told none of my
friends that I was watching it, because I did not want them to think that I was
opening myself to such propaganda. I’m
not sure why I decided to listen, but I did, and his speech made a small
opening in the wall of racism that surrounded my heart and my
consciousness. First, I was surprised at
the number of people who attended – I had believed that this was a very small
movement, led by agitators and Communists.
What I saw on that day was far beyond what I had been led to
believe. I told myself that something
different from what I believed was happening here. I wasn’t quite sure what it was, but I knew
that I would have to find whatever else there was.
Then Dr.
King spoke, and THAT VOICE! His voice
got my attention, but his content kept my attention. He spoke in metaphors of the American
Dream, a dream on which I had been raised, and now he was expanding it and
deepening it. I almost let myself be
inspired by that speech, but I had to hold back, because I felt that it would
be too dangerous for me to move towards that inspiration. But, he had opened a little crack in my
dividing wall of racism, and I began to see the world and myself a little
differently. Baby steps at this time,
but steps nonetheless. I had one teacher
at that time who I felt I could share this shift with. Her name was Vera Miller, and she was a
Jewish woman who taught English. She
heard me, and she suggested that I read “Cry the Beloved Country” by Alan
Paton, and it is about apartheid in South Africa. Even though I had seen and had engaged black
people all my life, I met my first black person in that novel, the Reverend
Stephen Kumalo.
I was a
senior in college in Memphis when Dr. King was assassinated there, and I have
written of that time in the article in The Atlantic – if you haven’t seen it,
here is the link: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/01/doubting-mlk-during-a-strike-in-memphis/550118/
As I began
to loosen the captivity of race in my life,
I allowed myself to be inspired by Dr. King’s 1963 speech. We began an MLK Breakfast at Oakhurst Presbyterian
in 1985, and ever since then we have used his witness, his ideas, and his
vision to inspire us and our actions. I’ve
since come to like two other speeches better:
“The Drum Major Instinct” preached at Ebenezer Baptist Church, where he
was pastor – he preached it two months before he was assassinated. The second is “A Time to Break Silence,”
preached at Riverside Church exactly a year before he was killed. In this latter one, he came out publicly
against the Vietnam War for the first time.
So, though
I never met Dr. King, I give thanks that he was one of the powerful influences
that pulled me out of the morass of captivity and on towards the light of
justice and equity. Next week, I’ll have
more on his struggles, but for now, it’s “thank you.”
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