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King's Legacy of Change
I have had the privilege of participating in most of the great humanizing movements of the second half of the last century: peace, labor, civil rights, black power, women's rights, Asian-American rights and environmental justice. Each was a tremendously transformative experience, expanding my understanding of what it means to be an American and a human being, challenging me to become more visionary and creative in developing strategies to bring about radical social change.
In all of those movements, Americans found the courage to question what kind of people we were and the wisdom to change ourselves into a people offering new hope in the world. The struggles of African-Americans for full citizenship and dignity inspired more than a half-century of progressive movements in the United States and around the world. People long denied and disrespected found their voices in the struggles.
More than forty years ago, The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. warned that unless we engage in a great revolution of values and overcome racism, materialism and militarism, we would be "dragged down the long, dark and shameful corridors of time reserved for those who possess power without compassion, might without morality and strength without sight."
That dark time has come. We face a constitutional crisis brought on by the imperial and arrogant acts of a President who has placed himself above the law and is conducting an illegal war, subverting the Constitution and willfully ignoring a planetary crisis that threatens the future of life on earth. As we are manipulated by fear and distrust, despair overcomes decency. We are losing faith in our capacity to create the world anew.
As we celebrate King's birthday this month and commemorate the fortieth anniversary of his assassination in April, we can look to the guiding light of his vision, at the height of his awareness, before he was taken from us. It is a vision that went beyond the "I Have a Dream" speech. It is a vision of which many are unaware. Many of us have amnesia when asked to recall the fullness of his message.
In the last three years of his life, confronted by the catastrophe of the Vietnam War and urban rebellions, King recognized that "the war in Vietnam is but a symptom of a far deeper malady within the American spirit. We are on the wrong side of a world revolution because we refuse to give up the privileges and the pleasures that come from the immense profits of overseas investment."
"We have come to value things more than people," he said. "Our technological development has outrun our spiritual development. We have lost our sense of community, of interconnection and participation."
In order to get on the right side of that revolution, King said that as a nation America must undergo a radical revolution of values against the giant triad of racism, materialism and militarism.
"A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: 'This is not just.' The Western arrogance of feeling that it has everything to teach others and nothing to learn from them is not just. A true revolution of values will lay hands on the world order and say of war: 'This way of settling differences is not just.' A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death."
The urban rebellions had also made King acutely aware of the need of young people for community and participation. "This generation," he said, "is engaged in a cold war with the earlier generation. It is not the familiar and normal hostility of the young groping for independence. It has a new quality of bitter antagonism and confused anger which suggests basic values are being contested.
"The source of this alienation is that our society has made material growth and technological advance an end in itself, robbing people of participation, so that human beings become smaller while their works become bigger."
The way to overcome this alienation, he said, is by changing our priorities. Instead of pursuing economic productivity, we need to expand our uniquely human powers, especially our capacity for "agape," the love that is ready to go to any length to restore community.
This love, King insisted, is not some sentimental weakness. We can learn its practical meaning from the young people who joined the civil rights movement, who put middle-class values of wealth and careers in second place, put on overalls to work in the isolated rural South because they felt the need for more direct ways of learning that would strengthen society and themselves.
At 92, going on 93, I am fortunate to still be around to rejoice at the new energies being unleashed all across this country by the presidential campaign of Barack Obama. In his person and in his prose, Obama embodies the achievements of the great movements of the twentieth century and the hope that by building on these movements we can become the agents of change that we urgently need in our country and in the world in the twenty-first century.
The challenges before us now are not unlike those King described: ending our catastrophic occupation of Iraq, addressing global warming, rebuilding cities and industries devastated by globalization, reducing the growing gulf between the haves and the have-nots. These demand huge changes, not only in our institutions but in ourselves. To become part of the solution, we, as a people, must recognize that we are a large part of the problem. To change the world, we must practice a much more active and participatory concept of American and global citizenship.
Obama can become a great President only if we become a great people. Though his image inspires us, Obama alone is not the movement for change. We have the right and the duty to create the vision that we want him to represent. Instead of projecting desired outcomes on his redemptive persona, instead of viewing ourselves solely as followers of a charismatic leader, we can and must become the leaders the nation has been looking for. This is the best way to make us less vulnerable to corporate funders and lobbyists who refract our values for private gain.
None of us can step back from the responsibility of becoming part of the solution. Because of the struggles of working people in factories and on farms, African-Americans, women, Chicanos, Native Americans and immigrants, gay people, youth and the disabled, all of us have a new "burden and responsibility." All of us have the opportunity to create a more human, more socially conscious and more ecologically responsible nation. I cannot imagine a better way to celebrate King's birthday and to honor his true legacy.
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18 Comments so far
Show Alljohn s. January 17th, 2008 11:11 pm
Thanks, I'll look her up. Sorry If I sound too negative. You make a good point.
John,
I salute Grace Lee Boggs and her many achievements, truly amazing is right.
Her many awards include:
1993: Human Rights Day Award, Center of Peace and Conflict Studies, Wayne State University.
1998: Zenobia Paine Drake Award, Black Family Development.
2000: Discipleship Award from Groundwork for a Just World.
2000: Distinguished Alumnae Award, Barnard College.
2000: Chinese American Pioneers Award, Organization of Chinese Americans.
2001: Women's Lifetime Achievement, Anti-Defamation League.
2002: Legacy Award, Museum of Chinese in America, New York City.
2004: Grassroots Peacebuilder Award, Peace Action of Michigan.
2004: Senior Celebrity Award, Bridging Communities, Detroit.
2004: Doctor of Humane Letters degree, College of Wooster.
2004: Interfaith Committee on Worker Issues Award.
2004: Lifetime Commitment Award, Michigan Coalition for Human Rights.
2005: Lifetime Achievement Award, Michigan Women's Federation.
2005: Community Honoree Award, WAND (Women's Action for New Directions).
2005: Urban Woman Writer in Residence, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies, Wayne State University.
2005: Lifetime Achievement Award, Detroit City Council.
2007: A Detroit News Michiganian of the Year.
A plaque in her honor is displayed at the National Women's Hall of Fame in Seneca Falls, New York.
2007 Doctor of Humane Letters degree, Kalamazoo College.
Hi. Please help me spread the most famous spech that is censored by the Corporate Media. MLK's 4/4/67 Why I Oppose the Vietnam War speech. I have spread it on on lots of big city discussion board sites, because otherwise millions will never hear of it.
You can hear a great recording of it by googling: Youtube MLK Vietnam.
You will be surprised at just how many INCREDIBLE quotes are in this one! As far as eloquence and content, IT FAR SURPASSES THE I HAVE A DREAM SPEECH!
How heartening to hear a spectrum of voices singing in concert in support of an Obama presidency. Whether rich or poor, black or white, Muslim or Christian, Republican or Democrat, young or old, Obama reaches across the divide to bring people together and heal the rifts.
Of course, one president alone cannot change the world. But we the people can change things, for whom the president is a leader, a guide, a voice of hope and reason, a lamp through the darkness. This is my vision of the president: giving people immediate, practical opportunities to put their inspiration to work through diverse organizations working to solve the challenges that, sooner or later, touch everyone on the planet.
Someone,
I want to believe in all that. I really do. I've spent the Bush years watching lies become the ruling currency of the land with all the catastrophic consequences it breeds (New Orleans and the entire Gulf Coast being the starkest examples of said consequences). The wounds in our country run so deep, it makes me afraid for it.
I'll never capitulate to such villainy (it's not my way and never will be) but I truly wonder if we can live up to Dr. King's ultimate vision of what this country could be...instead of replacing one happy little lie with another.
Like I said, I want to believe in it. The vision you gave and Dr. King before you is a better one than I've gotten all decade. BUT...we have to MEAN it...or it will be for nothing.
"This is the best way to make us less vulnerable to corporate funders and lobbyists who
refract our values for private gain."
(I'm fleshing out my question as bombs from the base 30 miles away explode and vibrate
through the building and my eardrums. I too want to believe that the bombs will stop.
And while I wasn't around or the 60s civil rights era, I was very cognitive of the Reagan Revolution,
experienciing first hand as well as the the construction of the DLC)
Nonetheless....
If this is the case, if indeed Obama is the one example of a presidential candidate
who we are supposed to challenge to overcome our country's social problems., our militarism,
or our materialism., everything Grace Lee Boggs argues., why does Obama have such great favor
among corporate funders? He and Clinton are in the $100 million fundraiser club.
Why does Obama have the AIPAC treasurer on his financial committee?
Why does Obama support Gen. Petrs. "counterinsurgency" manual?
Why does Obama state he will continue Bush's increase of the US MIL by 100,000?
Are our actions as loud as our words?
Why should I believe in either the individual or the type of political party he represents?
I think he will remain too close to the DLC to ever be the type of change Boggs challenges us
to find in her candidate of choice. I think Obama and Clinton are more politically aligned than many dare speak.
I agree with Nathaniel Heidenheimer's sentiment's on Dr. King's speech 100%. However, and this feeds into Gungnier's admonition of " BUT…we have to MEAN it…or it will be for nothing", I prefer, use and recommend, the title used by the A.J. Muste Memorial Institute of:
Declaration of Independence from The War in Vietnam
Martin Luther King articulated the American Dream in Washington DC with his I Have A Dream speech...Martin Luther King gave up his life in Memphis for his "Declaration".
I believe the greatest way to honor King and the American Spirit, and all the others who have sacrificed and for all the glory that such a change in National behavior can bring, is by using King's speech as part of the catalyst for bringing about the impeachment of members of the current White House administration, and as a moral and logical guide for the election of future governmental representatives.
No Declaration, No Dream...
Make the Declaration, Live the Dream.
www.wexlerwantshearings.com
George W. Bush was busy honoring King, too. Not Dr. Martin Luther King, but King Abdullah. Did you see them dancing arm in arm, waving big swords? Did you hear Bush offering him $20 billion worth of our latest killing gizmos? Did you hear Bush talking about freedom and democracy while shmoozing with and arming a despot whose government has one of the most shameful human rights records on Earth? What shameless hypocrisy!
The problem is that money talks, especially to politicians. Why should Obama or any other representative listen to a cheap, ungrateful mob when corporations and financial institutions will give him his heart's desires in return for florid speeches and promises to the mob he won't keep?
"Though his image inspires us, Obama alone is not the movement for change."
Exactly, isn't now, nor will he ever be.
"We have the right and the duty to create the vision that we want him to represent."
Right, we want him to represent a vision of peace and an end to war. The majority of people want to end the war now. Why do we need to create a vision that already exist? Oh give me a break!
To speak of the great Dr. Martin Luther King and Barak Obama on the same page is a great insult to Martin. Please don't try to draw any comparisons between them, Dr. King deserves more.
Got MLK?
I agree with tailcap, "Mr Barak Obama, you are no Dr. Martin Luther King Jr". Not by a long shot. Obama is "OWNED" by the corporate interests. Anyone who doesn't believe me, do your homework!!! Just because he is part african american doesn't mean he is the savior of this country. The "grassroots" movements these politicians try to sell you is all B.S. The only true "grassroots" exists in your local communities, and starts with you and the ones you care about getting involved locally to change the way things are headed. Nothing is ever going to change from the top down, haven't we had long enough to learn that lesson?? It starts with taking back your community, because in reality that is the only place you have the power to infect change. That is why Kings message was so powerful, and why he had to be silenced. His message always focused on community action, he was anti-federalist. I think he would be appaled at what his movement has become.King demanded to be treated as a humanbeing, made in the image of God, endowed with rights that are neither conferred by nor derived from the state they are God given, everyman is an aire to a legacy of dignity and worth. King's whole message was about EQUALITY for each and every humanbeing regardless of race, creed, class or nation.He never would advocate the "welfare state" that the civil rights movement has become. When people are made out to be "victims" they carry around that mentality due to the phychological impact of that stereotype. After his death the whole movement got flipped around and turned in the direction, that the "elites" of this country wanted it to head. Ron Paul would be a healthy start, but I don't think he could even go far enough to change the course we are heading. Crazy how in 8 years these neocons could deconstruct this country, a country that took centuries to build.
The part in here about Martin Luther King Jr's opposition to militarism and materialism is in "The Trumpet of Conscience," a book he wrote which covers a broad range of topics.
Long live Dr King! Long live the real American dream!
I underdstand but am disappointed by some of the responses above. If Dr. King's life and the movement he led taught us anything it certainly was that we must be the change we desire and not use either the rejection of others or the dire circumstances we find all around us.
The stinking "Reagan Revolution" is not even 30 years old, Jim Crow segregation was more than twice as old as that when Dr. King began the action in Montgomery AL. There was a whole body of law (the segregation laws) much larger and well established than Homeland Security, the Patriot Act, the usspension of Habeus Corpus, Military Tribunals, etc.
There was an entire body of legal theory to justify such law named interposition and nullification of which Dr. King spoke in his "I Have a Dream" speech--(yeah, those words had real and ugly meanings and were not just so much sing-songy rhyme thrown to please the crowd!)
All that being said, with a clear vision and determination by common people, this country was turned upside down (actually right side up) and they did what a bloddy civil war and 100 years of reconstruction and wishful hand-wringing could not. There is no reason that we people today cannot do the same thing if we have a similar vision articulated by a similarly eloquent and courageous leader (and No Barack O, ain't it and regretfully neither are Dennis Kucinich, John Edwards, or Ron Paul (yechh!).
Meanwhile our country, Black, White, Yellow, and Brown, awaits a latter-day MOses to lead us out of the imperialist wilderness to a promised land of brotherhood and peace. All power to all people--keep the dream alive!
I find myself in agreement with 'Poet'(above)in lamenting the excess negativity in tone of many of these postings--entirely out of proportion to the moving testimony of hope of this pioneering woman chinese-american activist, Grace Lee Boggs. So what if you don't agree with her final endorsement of Obama? I'm a little ambivalent about him too; but, the main focus of her piece was on carrying on the dream of Dr. King. If you find that boring, 'Tailcap', sorry, but the vision of the possibility of creating a more just, peaceful society has to be constantly restated,refought. Everyone might profit by googling 'Grace Lee Boggs'and clicking on the 'Wikipedia' biography on her (truly amazing!), or her interview on Democracy Now('Grace Lee Boggs reflects on Newark, Detroit uprisings').
Poet January 17th, 2008 5:16 pm
"If Dr. King's life and the movement he led taught us anything it certainly was that we must be the change we desire and not use either the rejection of others or the dire circumstances we find all around us."
Well said.
Tailcap,
I thank you for YOUR insights. I know that it is VERY, VERY hard not to be sucked-in to the competitive, media-hyped rivalry between the candidates. The best way to guard myself against this is to look at the bigger picture (the 'common dreams') that many of us progressives hold dear--regardless of all the hoopla around us. Another thing that comes to mind this MLK day--especially when we hear pious invocations to Dr. King by ALL politicians-- is to ask them "So, you honor DR. King in words; that's good. Now, how would you honor him in your DEEDS: Refraining from bombing Iraq and Afghan villages? Turning away from racial profiling, regardless of 'Security concerns'? Shifting federal spending AWAY from war and TOWARD genuine human needs?" It would be interesting to put them ALL on the hot-seat!
Yes, But how do we "Put them in the hot seat"??
The current administration is incapable of taking reponsibility for any of the policies they have established, which have had dire consequeces within our country as well as around the world. These men don't belong in the hotseat, they belong in padded rooms where they will be incapable of hurting anyone but themselves.