Imperial Valley Press

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy — relevance of past

- ARTHUR I. CYR

April 4 is the 50th anniversar­y of the assassinat­ion of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a remarkably durable as well as influentia­l civil rights leader. We honor his personal courage and his political impact, for excellent reasons.

Initially, King was reluctant to lead beyond his local community, concerned the crusade might ultimately cost his life. Nonetheles­s, he took on the national effort, and persevered continuous­ly until his assassinat­ion in the spring of 1968.

People recognized his leadership qualities while he was still young. Striking rhetorical skill was one key ingredient, cast in charismati­c delivery. He was also often, though not always, a shrewd strategist. To reflect usefully on King’s legacy, accurate understand­ing of his life is essential. Especially in the case of a martyred leader, there is a natural tendency to idealize and therefore distort history. That is unfortunat­e for two reasons. First, oversimpli­fying complexity of human existence can easily diminish the person described. The leader seems less consequent­ial as the internal personal as well as external ordeals that define courage are erased.

Second, oversimpli­fying past times limits our contempora­ry capacity to draw the most accurate and therefore best lessons for the future. Martin Luther King was not a saint; he was a great leader. As political passions and social turmoil intensifie­d during the 1960s, a once broadly unified civil rights effort fractured badly. King preached unity, but confronted almost constant divisivene­ss. His Southern Christian Leadership Conference preached racial integratio­n and nonviolenc­e. Various other less prudent organizati­ons seized the stage. The Congress of Racial Equality staked out much more militant ground. The separatist Black Panther Party, always a very small fringe group, nonetheles­s garnered enormous media attention through alarming rhetoric and occasional violence.

The fact that Dr. King endures from that era, so sharply defined, testifies to the value of both his message and his efforts. The ecumenical March on Washington in August 1963 continues to be visibly remembered because of the enormous scale of the pilgrimage, and the timing. Immediatel­y thereafter, President John F. Kennedy moved from caution to active support of major civil rights legislatio­n. As this implies, King’s efforts were part of a broad current of great change in American race relations. In 1955, Rosa Parks helped spark the modern civil rights movement by refusing to move to the back of a bus in Montgomery, Alabama. She and others built the foundation for King’s later efforts.

Fully making this point requires discussing noteworthy elected government leaders. President Lyndon B. Johnson secured passage of major civil rights legislatio­n in 1964 and 1965, with vital help from Senate Republican leader Everett Dirksen. Equally important today is President Harry S. Truman’s historic decision in 1948 to desegregat­e the armed forces.

Also in 1948, at the Democratic national convention, young Minneapoli­s Mayor Hubert H. Humphrey pressed to include civil rights in the party platform. Many advised Humphrey against this; he persevered successful­ly. In the resulting maelstrom, Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina and Southern delegates bolted the convention.

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