Porterville Recorder

Speeches, marches and a quiet reflection mark Martin Luther King anniversar­y

- By ERRIN HAINES WHACK AP NATIONAL WRITER

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Fifty years after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinat­ed, the civil rights leader’s family and admirers will mark the anniversar­y of his death with marches, speeches and quiet reflection on Wednesday.

The commemorat­ions stretch from his hometown of Atlanta to Memphis, where he died, and points beyond. Among the first events is a march led by the same sanitation workers union whose low pay King had come to protest when he was shot. Another event will kick off about the same time in Atlanta, where King’s daughter the Rev. Bernice A. King is moderating an awards ceremony in his honor.

The Memphis events are scheduled to feature King’s contempora­ries, including the Rev. Jesse Jackson, the Rev. Al Sharpton and U.S. Rep. John Lewis, along with celebritie­s such as the rapper Common. In the evening, the Atlanta events culminate with a bell-ringing and wreathlayi­ng at his crypt to mark the moment when he was gunned down on the balcony of the old Lorraine Motel on April 4, 1968. He was 39.

Wednesday’s events followed a rousing celebratio­n the night before of King’s “I’ve Been To the Mountainto­p” speech at Memphis’ Mason Temple Church of God in Christ. He delivered this speech the night before he was assassinat­ed.

Inside the church, Bernice King called her older brother, Martin Luther King III, to join her in the pulpit, and she discussed the difficulty of publicly mourning their father — a man hated during his lifetime, now beloved around the world.

“It’s important to see two of the children who lost their daddy 50 years ago to an assassin’s bullet,” said Bernice King, now 55. “But we kept going. Keep all of us in prayer as we continue the grieving process for a parent that we’ve had yet to bury.”

The anniversar­y coincides with a resurgence of white supremacy, the continued shootings of unarmed black men and a parade of discouragi­ng statistics on the lack of progress among black Americans on issues from housing to education to wealth. But rather than despair, the resounding message repeated at the church was one of resilience, resolve, and a renewed commitment to King’s legacy and unfinished work.

A gospel singer led a rousing rendition of “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” and the gathering took on the air of a mass meeting.

Lee Saunders, a national labor leader, recounted how on that night in 1968, King made an unplanned appearance to deliver the famous speech without notes after his aides saw how passionate the crowd was: “There was one man they wanted to hear from.”

But Saunders stressed that the purpose of the week’s commemorat­ions was not just to look to the past.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY MARK HUMPHREY ?? A crowd watches a ceremony at the National Civil Rights Museum commemorat­ing the anniversar­y of the assassinat­ion of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Wednesday, April 4, in Memphis, Tenn. King was assassinat­ed on the balcony of the building, formerly the...
AP PHOTO BY MARK HUMPHREY A crowd watches a ceremony at the National Civil Rights Museum commemorat­ing the anniversar­y of the assassinat­ion of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Wednesday, April 4, in Memphis, Tenn. King was assassinat­ed on the balcony of the building, formerly the...

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