Chicago Sun-Times

KING’S CHILDREN RECOUNT PAIN OF LOSING THEIR DAD

- BY DOMETI PONGO, WGN RADIO dpongo@ wgnradio. com | @ Dometi_

MEMPHIS, Tenn.—“Dad, don’t go.” Those were the words Martin Luther King III recalls saying to his father on the morning of April 4, 1968. Dr. King’s response to his 10- year- old son: “Don’t worry, I’ll be back,” King III said at Mason Temple COGIC in Memphis on the eve of the anniversar­y of his father’s assassinat­ion 50 years ago. “He didn’t come back,” the son said. The weather in Memphis on Tuesday was not unlike the 1968 evening when King delivered his foreboding “I’ve Been to the Mountainto­p” sermon without notes or preparatio­n. He was murdered the next day.

King III, the eldest of the children, flanked by his sister Bernice and his wife and daughter, told a crowd of about 3,000 at Mason Temple, the place where King gave his last speech, “Mountainto­p,” that being on the same stage his father stood had him “a little emotional” and “also excited.”

“We’ve got some difficult days ahead. We know we must work to realize the dream he envisioned. It was for a just and peaceful world,” said King III at the Mountain top Commemorat­ion ceremony at Mason Temple.

In between prerecorde­d remarks given by former Presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, and other speakers, clips of King’s last speech played while some cried and rejoiced hearing his words in the place they originated.

“Like anybody, I would like to live a long life. Longevity has its place. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And he’s allowed me to go up to the mountain,” King exclaimed to recitation­s from the congregati­on much in the fashion of a southern church. The same excerpt was replayed in Mason Temple as the mood changed from jubilant and hopeful to more pensive — almost somber — as King’s ominous message echoed through the place of worship. “And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land!”

Standing next to her brother, Dr. Bernice King recounted tales that could lead one to believe that same proverbial cloud that hovers over Memphis has rained misfortune on the family of one of America’s most prominent leaders.

She calmly begins, “Let me just say that many people don’t know that the trauma we have dealt with as a family has been overwhelmi­ng. We lost Daddy to an assassin’s bullet. We lost an uncle [ A. D. King] mysterious­ly in a swimming pool because he knew something about that assassinat­ion.” The King family also lost their grandmothe­r, Alberta King in 1974. She was fatally shot as she sat at an organ in Ebenezer Baptist Church.

After asking the church for prayers as her family continues to push through the grieving process, King revealed what she said would have been the title of a sermon King was slated to deliver on April 7, 1968.

“When my father spoke those prophetic words 50 years ago, many people don’t know he made a phone call to my grandmothe­r with the title of his next speech,” said King.

The title was slated to be “America May Go to Hell.”

She said, “I think as I look at the landscape of our world today, America may still go to hell. So, 50 years later, I am here to declare that America must be born again, and it is time for America to repent.”

 ?? MARK HUMPHREY/ AP ?? The Rev. Bernice King speaks Tuesday as her brother Martin Luther King III listens at the Mason Temple in Memphis, Tennessee.
MARK HUMPHREY/ AP The Rev. Bernice King speaks Tuesday as her brother Martin Luther King III listens at the Mason Temple in Memphis, Tennessee.
 ?? DOMETI PONGO/ WGN RADIO ?? People wait outside Mason Temple in Memphis for Tuesday’s event. Mason Temple is the site where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave the “Mountainto­p” speech 50 years ago.
DOMETI PONGO/ WGN RADIO People wait outside Mason Temple in Memphis for Tuesday’s event. Mason Temple is the site where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave the “Mountainto­p” speech 50 years ago.
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