The Columbus Dispatch

Statue of Martin Luther King Jr. unveiled in his hometown

- By Jonathan Landrum Jr.

ATLANTA — The daughter of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. stood beside her father’s newly unveiled statue Monday, just a few blocks from where he grew up, handing out hugs and telling each wellwisher: “It’s about time.”

The statue paying tribute to King made its public debut Monday on the Georgia Capitol grounds in front of around 800 people including Gov. Nathan Deal, many other state political leaders and several members of the King family. The sculpture’s installati­on comes more than three years after Georgia lawmakers endorsed the project.

“Forty-nine years ago when my father was assassinat­ed, he was the most hated man in America. Today, he is one of the most loved men in the world,” the Rev. Bernice King said of her father, who was slain in 1968 in Memphis, Tennessee.

A replica of the nation’s Liberty Bell tolled three times before the 8-foot bronze statue was unveiled on the 54th anniversar­y of King’s “I have a dream” speech at the 1963 March on Washington. The sculpture depicts King in mid-stride, as his left arm holds an overcoat while grasping a batch of papers.

“Today, we as the sons and daughters of former slaves and former slave owners are here to witness the unveiling of that statue,” Bernice King said. “It is a glorious and grand day in the state of Georgia and in the United States of America and all over the world.”

King’s statue was erected in his Southern hometown at a time when monuments honoring Civil War Confederat­es are coming down in many other places across the South.

Bernice King said she hopes the erection of her father’s statue can now spark conversati­ons about the impact of monuments in public spaces.

“This statue being unveiled today, I believe, also provides a sense of hope to a nation that is in turmoil once again, as many people around this nation are removing and taking down Confederat­e monuments,” she said.

 ??  ?? The 8-foot bronze statue was unveiled in Georgia on the 54th anniversar­y of Dr. King’s “I have a dream” speech in Washington.
The 8-foot bronze statue was unveiled in Georgia on the 54th anniversar­y of Dr. King’s “I have a dream” speech in Washington.

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