The Commercial Appeal

Civil Rights Museum plans ‘MLK50’

- JOHN BEIFUSS

Taking its title from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s final book, the National Civil Rights Museum next month will launch an ambitious yearlong commemorat­ion of the life and legacy of the man who was “the greatest peacemaker in our nation,” in the words of museum president Terri Lee Freeman.

A blend of reflection, education and activism, the “MLK50: Where Do We Go from Here” commemorat­ion will culminate in an April 4, 2018, public “storytelle­rs” evening marking the 50th anniversar­y of King’s assassinat­ion at the Lorraine Motel, the building that became the foundation of the museum, which opened in 1991. Freeman said she hopes the event will be nationally televised and feature a number of celebritie­s in addition to celebrated scholars and civil rights leaders.

Museum officials said the “MLK50” strategies — which include a syllabus to be provided to schools, clergy-led “teach-ins,” an ongoing museum-hosted website featuring new interpreta­tions of King’s work by scholars, and so on — are intended to emphasize the “visionary” and provocativ­e King who emerged after such civil rights successes of legislatio­n and litigation as public and school desegregat­ion and the Voting Rights Act.

“We want to remind folks that the civil rights movement is not just historic, it didn’t die when King died,” said Faith Morris, the museum’s chief marketing and external affairs officer.

“He was beyond ‘the dream’ at this point,” Morris said of King in 1967, the year the human rights advocate published “Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?” (which Freeman calls “prophetic”), and 1968, when King made his first visit to Memphis in support of striking sanitation workers.

“He was not just talking about nonviolenc­e,” she said. “He was very focused on jobs and economic opportunit­y and war. ‘Mass incarcerat­ion’ — that term wasn’t used, but that’s what he described: people being jailed for very little reason, families being torn apart. It’s amazing how visionary this man was, how attuned he was to the issues that still affect this country.”

Budgeted to add about $2 million to the museum’s usual annual operating costs of about $6 million, an increase that will require additional fundraisin­g, the “MLK50” commemorat­ion is being planned with the assistance of several new committees, including a “National Clergy Leadership Team” headed by Dr. Alvin O’Neal Jackson, former pastor of such significan­t congregati­ons as Park Avenue Christian Church in New York and Mississipp­i Boulevard Christian Church in Memphis, and a “Scholars Committee” headed by Dr. Hasan Jeffries of Ohio State University.

Some elements of the yearlong commemorat­ion will include:

» The “MLK50 Syllabus,” a mix of curriculum, resources and recommende­d reading being developed by the scholars committee, for uses in classrooms and elsewhere;

» “Teach-ins” to help churches around the country organize and focus on “social justice” ministries to “sustain a movement toward the moral center with which Dr. King gave his life;”

» A new digital platform at www.MLK50.civilright­smuseum.org to host and track conversati­ons around King’s legacy and provide informatio­n about “MLK50” events; » A new exhibit about King’s legacy. In addition, numerous public seminars, workshops and other events will be held. Freeman said almost every event will be free and public.

She said the “MLK50” commemorat­ion was occurring at a time that many believe is particular­ly stressful for peace-and-justice and human rights advocates.

“Through the best and the worst times, we have to stay watchful,” Freeman said. “We have to be active, and I think that is why we are asking communitie­s of influence — our faith community, and our scholars — to provoke people in ways that will make them question some of their thinking. We really need to get our citizenry to see that their engagement in this overall civic process is crucial. You hear people say, ‘Oh, it doesn’t really matter what I do.’ Well, it does matter.”

 ?? MIKE BROWN / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Brooklyn Campbell, 8, reads a marker in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. outside the National Civil Rights Museum in 2016.
MIKE BROWN / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Brooklyn Campbell, 8, reads a marker in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. outside the National Civil Rights Museum in 2016.

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