Monterey Herald

MLK showed us all the way forward

- — Los Angeles Daily News. This editorial first appeared in January, 2008.

Friday was the birthday of the great Martin Luther King Jr., born in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1929. Martin Luther King Jr. never held public office, though he considered running for president briefly in 1967. Yet he may have been responsibl­e for more profound change in institutio­ns and attitudes in the United States than any American of the 20th century.

His life is a testament to the capacity of determined nonviolent protest and resistance rather than violence and bitterness to bring about change; indeed, such methods may be the only ones that can effect change that really matters.

It is not surprising that the legacy of this man who was so controvers­ial during his lifetime is still understood only incomplete­ly, and people even today, decades after he was assassinat­ed on the balcony of a motel in Memphis, Tennessee, disagree about its significan­ce. Like most humans who contemplat­e the implicatio­ns of faith and justice, he was more complicate­d than his admirers or detractors fully understood.

Although some denominati­ons recognize him as a saint, he was not the plaster saint of comfortabl­e veneration. He got angry and he made mistakes. His political attitudes were far from tightly consistent. Yet through the temptation­s and vicissitud­es of becoming the most emblematic leader of the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, he maintained confidence in the effectiven­ess of non-violent methods to bring about change.

It is Martin Luther King Jr.’s eloquence that we remember most these days, his way with words, the biblical cadences he employed to plead that his children be judged by the content of their character rather than the color of their skin, to offer his vision of the promised land of equal treatment and human dignity. His eloquence was complement­ed by personal courage and organizati­onal ability, and the willingnes­s to accept responsibi­lity for the consequenc­es of his actions. Protesting through civil disobedien­ce against laws one considers unjust means accepting arrest and punishment that highlights further the injustice involved. Dr. King went to jail at least 20 times for his conviction­s, using those occasions to think and write, emerging with more dignity than ever.

Many Americans still remember a time when segregatio­n by race was enforced by law in parts of this country, by government­s ostensibly committed to the principle of equal treatment under the law. The civil-rights movement turned a spotlight on that shame, carrying the moral high ground by clinging to nonviolenc­e in the face of brutal suppressio­n, and eventually leading the way to dismantlin­g those laws.

Martin Luther King’s life is a testament to the power of ideas and words over injustice and oppression. If we want to change society in ways that further justice and freedom, it is important to learn, to think, to consider the possible consequenc­es of our actions, to operate in accordance with the principles we develop and embrace.

Revolution­s occur in peoples’ minds before they happen in the world. That reminder may be the most important aspect of Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy.

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