Dayton Daily News

MLK’s daughter meets with pope

Pontiff is ‘a leader and moral voice for the entire world.’

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The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s surviving daughter had a private audience with Pope Francis at the Vatican on Monday.

The Rev. Bernice King presented the pontiff with the sixth volume of the civil rights leader’s published papers, subtitled “Advocate of the Social Gospel, September 1948-March 1963.”

A video of the meeting provided by the Vatican showed a smiling King greeting the pontiff, then speaking briefly through a translator, but no audio was provided. She tweeted after that the meeting was “#lifechangi­ng.”

Speaking later to the television outlet of Italian Bishops Conference, King called Francis “a leader and moral voice for the entire world.”

“The words that the pope recalled of my father, those which resonate in his heart, of peace, non-violence, respect for the dignity of every human being, the centrality of what is human, is truly crucial today,” King said, according to an Italian translatio­n provided by the station.

The 54-year-old King is the youngest child of Martin and Coretta Scott King and the chief executive officer of the King Center in Atlanta. She was 5 when her father was assassinat­ed. Her brothers, Martin Luther King III and Dexter Scott King are also still living, but their sister, Yolanda King, died in 2007.

King was in Italy to receive an internatio­nal prize recognizin­g women involved in peace initiative­s.

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