Martin
Luther King Jr.
1929-1968
He was born
Michael King, but when he was five years old his father (also Michael) decided
that father and son should be renamed "Martin Luther" -- senior and
junior. Thereafter the putative
leader of the Afro-American people was known as "ML."
His intellectual precocity appeared as early as the prejudice he would
have to fight all his life. For as
he exuberantly awaited the end of the bus ride home following his triumph at his
school's public speaking contest, the conductor exploded, "You black
sonofabitch." King hadn't
responded instantly when the conductor told him to surrender his seat to a white
rider.
When only fifteen King was admitted to
Morehouse
College
, an all-black institution in
Atlanta
. He focussed on
a legal career since law seemed the vehicle for addressing the shocking social
inequities that were rooted in racist iniquity.
Soon, however, Dr. Benjamin Mays, Morehouse's president and King's
personal mentor, acquainted him with an expression of the Christian faith that
was intellectually rigorous, socially sensitive, and ethically compelling.
Determined now to be a preacher, he began theological studies at Crozer
Seminary,
Pennsylvania
, one of the few blacks among the white student body.
Searching for the roots of injustice, King alighted on capitalism, only
to see that its inherent exploitation found no correction in communism's
cruelty. Illumination flooded him
the day he attended a lecture on Gandhi and understood two crucial matters: one,
that only as injustice is overturned without a legacy of bitterness and
festering recrimination has anything been accomplished; two, that just as
non-violent protest had been possible in India thanks to British protection,
paradoxically, amidst British colonialist oppression, the same non-violent
protest could be effective in the USA on account of the Constitution.
And just as Gandhi had insisted that the British shouldn't be slain for
exemplifying the hardheartedness endemic in humankind (Indians included,) black
Americans would have to help white people save themselves from themselves.
Gandhi had taken seriously Jesus' forgiveness of enemies when British
colonialists had not. King knew that
we are never closer to God than we are to our worst enemy.
Oppressor and oppressed were already linked in Christ.
Acclaimed Crozer's outstanding student, King relished the scholarship
Boston
University
's
School
of
Theology
accorded him for doctoral studies.
While in the north he met and married Coretta Scott, a Methodist.
Declining tantalising academic positions in the north, he returned to the
south to equip the people for whom he'd been anointed.
As pastor of
Dexter
Avenue
Baptist
Church
in
Montgomery
, he realized that it wasn't enough to inform people; they
had to be moved. Lecture and sermon
were qualitatively distinct; the latter bore fruit only as informed minds and
warmed hearts issued in wills that acted in the face of institutions and
images and ideologies and "isms" still entrenched despite the
Emancipation of 1863. King developed
the thoughtful, persuasive rhetoric for which he became famous as alliteration
and illustration and startling turn-of-phrase were found in speech patterns and
word associations as unforgettable as his cadences were irresistible.
Montgomery
embodied the ante-bellum myth that black people were
sub-human chattels. Since few of
them could afford cars, they had to ride city buses to and from work.
They were never allowed to sit in the first four rows of seats.
When they paid their fare at the fare box beside the driver they then had
to get off the bus, walk outside to the rear, and re-enter there.
Frequently the driver drove off before they'd had to time to re-board.
It all came to a head on
Friday, December 2, 1955
when Mrs. Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of the bus.
The police arrested and charged her.
King organized black leaders of the boycott.
(He spoke of it as the "Montgomery Improvement Association.")
The following Monday not one black person boarded a bus.
They rejoiced that they had finally exchanged "tired souls for tired
feet." The city lost vast
revenues. The police began harassing
black leaders. King's home was
destroyed. Fifty carloads of Ku Klux
Klansmen prowled menacingly through black neighbourhoods, but now the people
remained on the streets instead of huddling indoors.
King called off the boycott only when the mayor announced he'd uphold the
Supreme Court's decision outlawing segregated schooling.
Marches were organized to desegregate transit companies and stations in
other southern towns.
Then a breakthrough appeared in the midst of overwhelming setback.
Alabama
had elected George Wallace governor on the strength of
"Segregation Forever." Bull
Connor,
Birmingham
's Commissioner of Public Safety, was its enforcer.
His brutal, oafish vulgarity loomed on nation-wide TV as he turned fire
hoses and Doberman Pinschers on defenceless children singing "We shall
overcome." Soon all of
America
was reading the imprisoned King's landmark "Letter from
a Birmingham Jail." A few days
later Connor was again yelling at his men to train hoses on 3000 youngsters and
knock them down. His men refused.
King felt that
Red Sea
waters had parted. Apparently
many others did too as the ensuing March on
Washington
gathered up 250,000, one-quarter of them white.
From the seat of federal power King soared with his "I have a
dream," a speech as important in
U.S.
history as
Lincoln
's Gettysburg Address.
Meanwhile King's notorious sexual infidelities provided ready material
for J.Edgar Hoover and the FBI in their attempts at discrediting his movement.
Yet his credibility mounted as he became the youngest recipient of the
Nobel Peace Prize. Public sympathy
swelled as he spoke of black people denied voter registration inasmuch as they'd
failed to cross a "t" in their application form.
When marchers from
Selma
, braving setbacks and savagery, finally arrived in
Montgomery, they stood at
Confederate Square
and sang
Deep in my heart, I do believe
That we have overcome today.
On
April 4, 1968
, King was standing on a
Memphis
hotel balcony when a bullet severed his jugular vein and his
spinal cord. Three days later
President Johnson, who had decried
America
's "crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice,"
declared a National Day of Mourning. Next
day Coretta led 19,000 through the streets of
Memphis
. No one was
molested.
King's sin can't be excused as "weakness." Still, it recalls
the sin of another master, King David of
Bethlehem
. Both men proved
yet again Martin Luther's aphorism, "God can draw a straight line with a
crooked stick." Above all M.L.
King recalls a blind man who was granted sight, as all of us can be, only as he
called out, "Son of David, have mercy on me" -- and knew that the sin
of Israel's greatest defender and leader couldn't stymie the sight-bestowing
gift of Israel's greater Son.