The Peterborough Examiner

Trump looms over holiday

Martin Luther King Jr. Day comes amid racial firestorm caused by U.S. president

- ERRIN HAINES WHACK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA — The first Martin Luther King Jr. holiday of Donald Trump’s presidency is taking place amid a racial firestorm of Trump’s own making.

In the same week that he honoured King by making a national park out of the ground where King was born and preached until his death, Trump denigrated practicall­y the entire African diaspora, and left many Americans headed into the civil rights icon’s birthday convinced that the leader of their country is a racist.

For African-Americans in particular, this latest insult from Trump felt like whiplash. Barely a year ago, America’s first black president, Barack Obama, marked his final King Day in office with his usual community service; now, his successor is presiding over a racial backlash the country has hardly seen in more than a generation.

Trump has denied being racist, labelling himself the “least racist person there is” during his 2016 campaign.

He began last week by designatin­g the historic site around King’s Atlanta birth home as a national park. By week’s end, Trump was signing a King holiday proclamati­on with the martyred activist’s nephew at his side.

But in between, the president sat in a White House meeting on immigratio­n policy and denigrated much of African diaspora as coming from “s---hole countries” while expressing a preference for immigrants from Norway, a majority white nation.

This is the type of thing, activists, religious leaders and scholars say, that puts Trump’s presidency in direct conflict with the legacy of King, who was assassinat­ed April 4, 1968 while trying to make America a more inclusive society.

“This is what I would like President Trump to do: Don’t let the King holiday find you using your Twitter account in an inappropri­ate way,” King ’s daughter, the Rev. Bernice King, said. “If he can dare to do that, I would be proud on that day that our president honoured Dr. King by not doing things that are offensive.”

Much of Trump’s first year as president has been marked by racial controvers­y. Last February, Trump kicked off Black History Month by praising long-dead abolitioni­st Frederick Douglass in the present tense, as if Douglass were still alive. He referred to NFL players protesting systemic racism as “sons of b-----” and suggested they should be benched or fired for their refusal to stand during the national anthem.

During a speech to African leaders last fall, he referred to the nonexisten­t country of “Nambia” when attempting to discuss Namibia. In June, he said Nigerian immigrants would “never go back to their huts” after coming to the U.S.

King’s son, Martin Luther King III, met with Trump on the last King holiday, four days before Trump took office. He spoke to the thenpresid­ent-elect about the importance of voting rights — only to see Trump establish a now-defunct commission to investigat­e voter fraud, which some saw as a move to intimidate minority voters.

“I would like to believe that the president’s intentions are not to be divisive, but much of what he says seems or feels to be divisive,” King III said. “It would be wonderful to have a president who talked about bringing America together and exhibited that, who was involved in doing a social project ... that would show humility.”

Civil rights leaders said Friday the president’s comments are not new, but are the most recent and glaring proof of Trump’s racist views, and shocking to the point that congressio­nal leaders and Americans can no longer ignore his bigotry.

“The Trump era ... is a direct assault on the legacy of Dr. King,” said the Rev. Raphael Warnock, pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church, where King preached for the last eight years of his life. “The conversati­on about who we are as Americans has shifted and given in to a kind of xenophobia that makes it difficult to discuss issues that affect all Americans.”

New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, who is in Atlanta this weekend being honoured by The King Center for Nonviolent Social Change, said “my soul has ached” during Trump’s presidency. But Booker, one of two black senators, said Trump’s critics must mobilize against his policies or risk being consumed by their own hurt and anger. Paraphrasi­ng King, Booker said, “The problem today is not the vitriolic words and violent actions of the bad people, but the appalling silence and inaction of the good people.”

During the civil rights movement, King directly confronted and exposed the ills of racism, and led a movement that pressured the American government to end legalized segregatio­n. He spent the last year of his life condemning what he called the “triple evils” of racism, poverty and war.

Bernice King, who serves as the King Center’s chief executive, said the lesson of nonviolenc­e is to focus on defeating injustice, not individual­s. She said her father’s life and work should be applied to the current moment, where racism has again come out into the open.

“Trump’s election could be a blessing in disguise,” Bernice King said. “This is the opportunit­y for America to correct itself.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addresses marchers during his “I Have a Dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on Aug. 28, 1963. The slain civil rights leader’s daughter, Bernice King, says U.S. President Donald Trump’s election is an...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. addresses marchers during his “I Have a Dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington on Aug. 28, 1963. The slain civil rights leader’s daughter, Bernice King, says U.S. President Donald Trump’s election is an...

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