Albuquerque Journal

War in Gaza, US election factor into some events planned for MLK holiday

- BY TERRY TANG AND NOREEN NASIR

As communitie­s nationwide celebrate the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. holiday this weekend with events ranging from parades to prayer services, some people are taking a cue from the slain civil rights icon’s history of protest to demonstrat­e against the war in Gaza and draw attention to the looming U.S. presidenti­al election.

The Monday holiday also marks 100 days since Oct. 7, when Hamas launched an attack in southern Israel that killed some 1,200 people and resulted in about 240 taken hostage. Since then, more than 100 Israelis remain kidnapped and more than 23,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed in Israel’s bombardmen­t of Gaza, as global health organizati­ons have warned of a worsening humanitari­an crisis there.

Perhaps the biggest organized event of the weekend in the U.S. was held in the nation’s capital Saturday — the March on Washington for Gaza, co-hosted by the American Muslim Task Force on Palestine, comprising some of the largest Muslim organizati­ons in the U.S., along with antiwar and racial justice groups.

Thousands of people rallied near the White House to call for an end to Israeli military action in Gaza, with some holding signs questionin­g President Joe Biden’s viability as a presidenti­al candidate because of his staunch support for Israel in the war against Hamas.

March organizers called on Biden to demand a permanent cease-fire and an end to the violence against civilians in Gaza and the West Bank. They also called for the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinia­n political prisoners and an end to “American unconditio­nal financial support for the Israeli military,” according to Edward Ahmed Mitchell, AMTP media coordinato­r and deputy director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

The title of Saturday’s march evoked the famous March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963, at which King delivered his historic “I Have a Dream” speech atop the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. That history, as well as King’s vocal opposition to the U.S. role in the Vietnam War toward the end of his life, was a guiding factor for the organizers.

Mitchell, who called King’s legacy “multifacet­ed,” said King spoke up even if it meant getting vilified.

“He was considered un-American and called a traitor. Even the political establishm­ent shunned him,” Mitchell said.

In 1967, exactly one year before he was assassinat­ed, King delivered his famous “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence” speech at Riverside Church in New York City. After quietly opposing the Vietnam War for years, he took the

public step to condemn it, connecting racial and economic inequality in the U.S. with increased military spending abroad.

King’s daughter, Bernice King, has said her father was against antisemiti­sm and also would have opposed the bombing of Gaza. The taking of lives through retaliator­y violence is not the strategy he would want to see today.

“There is an opportunit­y for us to have a real breakthrou­gh and get to some genuine conversati­ons and actions that can allow people to co-exist in an area of the world,” Bernice King said in a recent interview from The King Center in Atlanta, where she is CEO.

She believes protests are critical in difficult times. King just hopes that people in general use nonviolent words and actions if they invoke her father’s name.

 ?? CHANCEY BUSH/JOURNAL ?? Pro-Palestine demonstrat­ors march behind participan­ts in the MLK Commemorat­ive March on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue in Albuquerqu­e on Saturday.
CHANCEY BUSH/JOURNAL Pro-Palestine demonstrat­ors march behind participan­ts in the MLK Commemorat­ive March on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue in Albuquerqu­e on Saturday.

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