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The life of Martin Luther
King Jr.
Any number
of historic moments in the civil rights struggle
have been used to identify Martin Luther King, Jr. —
prime mover of the Montgomery bus boycott, keynote
speaker at the March on Washington, youngest Nobel Peace
Prize laureate. But in retrospect, single events are
less important than the fact that King, and his policy
of nonviolent protest, was the dominant force in the
civil rights movement during its decade of greatest
achievement, from 1957 to 1968.
K ing
was born Michael Luther King in Atlanta on Jan. 15, 1929
— one of the three children of Martin Luther King Sr.,
pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, and Alberta
(Williams) King, a former schoolteacher. (He was renamed
"Martin" when he was about 6 years old.)
After
going to local grammar and high schools, King enrolled
in Morehouse College in Atlanta in 1944. He wasn't
planning to enter the ministry, but then he met Dr.
Benjamin Mays, a scholar whose manner and bearing
convinced him that a religious career could be
intellectually satisfying as well. After receiving his
bachelor's degree in 1948, King attended Crozer
Theological Seminary in Chester, Pa., winning the
Plafker Award as the outstanding student of the
graduating class, and the J. Lewis Crozer Fellowship as
well. King completed the coursework for his doctorate in
1953, and was granted the degree two years later upon
completion of his dissertation.
Married by
then, King returned South to become pastor of the Dexter
Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Ala. Here, he made
his first mark on the civil-rights movement, by
mobilizing the black community during a 382-day boycott
of the city's bus lines. King overcame arrest and other
violent harassment, including the bombing of his home.
Ultimately, the U.S. Supreme Court declared bus
segregation unconstitutional.
A national
hero and a civil-rights figure of growing importance,
King summoned together a number of black leaders in 1957
and laid the groundwork for the organization now known
as the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC).
King was elected its president, and he soon began
helping other communities organize their own protests
against discrimination.
After
finishing his first book and making a trip to India,
King returned to the United States in 1960 to become
co-pastor, with his father, of Ebenezer Baptist Church.
Three
years later, King's nonviolent tactics were put to their
most severe test in Birmingham, during a mass protest
for fair hiring practices and the desegregation of
department-store facilities.
Police brutality used against the marchers
dramatized the plight of blacks to the nation at large,
with enormous impact. King was arrested, but his voice
was not silenced: He wrote "Letter
from a Birmingham Jail" to refute his critics.
Later that
year King was a principal speaker at the historic March
on Washington, where he delivered one of the most
passionate addresses of his career. Time magazine
designated him as its
Person of the Year for 1963. A few months later he
was named recipient of the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize. When
he returned from Norway, where he had gone to
accept the award, King took on new challenges. In
Selma, Ala., he led a voter-registration campaign that
ended in the Selma-to-Montgomery Freedom March. King
next brought his crusade to Chicago, where he launched
programs to rehabilitate the slums and provide housing.
In the
North, however, King soon discovered that young and
angry blacks cared little for his preaching and even
less for his pleas for peaceful protest. Their
disenchantment was one of the reasons he rallied behind
a new cause: the war in Vietnam.
Although
he was trying to create a new coalition based on equal
support for peace and civil rights, it caused an
immediate rift. The National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) saw King's shift
of emphasis as "a serious tactical mistake" the Urban
League warned that the "limited resources" of the
civil-rights movement would be spread too thin;
But from
the vantage point of history, King's timing was superb.
Students, professors, intellectuals, clergymen and
reformers rushed into the movement. Then, King turned
his attention to the domestic issue that he felt was
directly related to the Vietnam struggle: poverty. He
called for a guaranteed family income, he threatened
national boycotts, and he spoke of disrupting entire
cities by nonviolent "camp-ins." With this in mind, he
began to plan a massive march of the poor on Washington,
D.C., envisioning a demonstration of such intensity and
size that Congress would have to recognize and deal with
the huge number of desperate and downtrodden Americans.
King
interrupted these plans to lend his support to the
Memphis sanitation men's strike. He wanted to discourage
violence, and he wanted to focus national attention on
the plight of the poor, unorganized workers of the city.
The men were bargaining for basic union representation
and long-overdue raises.
But he
never got back to his poverty plans. Death came for King
on April 4, 1968, on the balcony of the black-owned
Lorraine Hotel just off Beale Street. While standing
outside with Jesse Jackson and Ralph Abernathy, King was
shot in the neck by a rifle bullet. His death caused a
wave of violence in major cities across the country.
However,
King's legacy has lived on. In 1969, his widow, Coretta
Scott King, organized the
Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Non-Violent Social
Change. Today it stands next to his beloved Ebenezer
Baptist Church in Atlanta. His birthday, Jan. 15, is a
national holiday, celebrated each year with
educational programs, artistic displays, and concerts
throughout the United States. The Lorraine Hotel where
he was shot is now the
National Civil Rights Museum.
— Based on
The African American Almanac, 7th ed., Gale, 1997.
Check out this speech........It is as good now as it was
back in the day!
What is Your Life's Blueprint?

Benjamin Franklin
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