The Commercial Appeal

MLK Jr. Day festivitie­s scaled back

Cities cancel, downsize events due to COVID-19

- Marc Ramirez

This year, the campus of the National Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tennessee, will be eerily empty on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Gone will be the children and families enjoying the day's activities – as many as 12,000 visitors on a good-weather day – and the crowds donating food or giving blood.

“With the pandemic, it's hard to do that,” said Faith Morris, chief marketing and external affairs officer for the museum, which is marking the holiday online. “We will try to give those feelings virtually, but it's not lost on us that it does in some form take away from the sentiment of the movement.”

Across the nation, scores of marches, parades and other events held to mark the holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr. have been canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic that has especially devastated Black Americans. Many events have moved online, offered virtually through Zoom or other apps – but organizers hope public enthusiasm will remain high given the extra resonance that the holiday carries in a time of continuing social unrest.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day, held on the third Monday of January, arrives this year after months of Black Lives Matter civil rights protests following the police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and a recession that has disproport­ionately hurt Black Americans. It also follows a Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump, including many white nationalis­ts trying to discredit the votes of Black Americans who backed President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris, who will be the nation's first Black and first Asian vice president.

“You can't help but make the parallels between what Dr. King was fighting for and all that we've been dealing with now,” Morris said. “Back then it all had to do with the ballot, the vote, and being called fake and void – and sadly, not a whole lot has changed.”

Biden, who was overwhelmi­ngly backed by Black voters, is scheduled to be sworn into office Wednesday.

“It is providenti­al, even poetic, that not only is it taking place two days before what we believe will be a new era of the presidency but also on the heels of one of the ugliest episodes in American politics,” said senior pastor Frederick Haynes III of Friendship West Baptist Church in Dallas. “To me, that signals that if we can take an honest, fresh look at Dr. King, that this is an opportunit­y to create community out of this time of chaos.”

Haynes was set to speak at a virtual candle-lighting ceremony marking the holiday in Dallas, which, like many cities, canceled its annual march in favor of virtual experience­s, some with creative approaches: San Antonio, which hosts what is believed to be the nation's largest annual march, commission­ed a filmmaker to produce a history of the holiday; in Houston, home to the nation's oldest MLK parade, organizers are hosting a “parade of giving” to help the city's needy and broadcasti­ng a virtual parade.

Some worry that a virtual experience might not prove as effective as the real thing.

In Las Vegas, where a popular parade has been canceled in favor of a virtual one, “people will have to be in front of their TV rather than watch the floats go by outside,” said longtime organizing committee member Alphonso Mason.

Such a prospect will be more palatable to older people, he guessed, than younger attendees who eagerly cheer on each year the drill teams, motorcycle clubs and undulating lowriders that stream by.

“COVID is serious,” Mason said, “so for the most part people do understand. Health and safety is foremost.”

Bates College, a liberal-arts college in Lewiston, Maine, annually observes the holiday with a day-long slate of workshops, panels and other activities; those, too, are all going virtual this year.

Organizati­ons in some cities, meanwhile, are moving forward with plans for in-person events – including a pair of annual marches in Portland, Oregon, and Seattle. The gatherings come after the FBI warned last week of possible armed protests in all 50 states, and experts have worried that domestic terrorists might turn their attention to state capitols.

So far, such worries have not consumed those organizing holiday events.

“White supremacis­ts don't usually show up to our protests unless they're in trucks,” said Teressa Raiford, executive director and founder of Don't Shoot PDX, a police watchdog group that is among those sponsoring Portland's Reclaim MLK Annual March for Human Rights and Dignity. “We've learned to deescalate that by not engaging.”

But since the group has often been at odds with city leaders and law enforcemen­t, “we're always worried about our safety and what's going to happen. So this year's no different,” she said.

In Seattle, where an estimated 10,000 people attended the city's annual march last year, organizers say they don't expect numbers at the outdoor event to drop much. Health-safety protocols will be enforced and various organizati­ons have contribute­d personal protective equipment, said Shaude' Moore, chair of the Seattle MLK Jr. Organizing Coalition.

In San Antonio, march organizers began anticipati­ng the event's possible cancellati­on in July, observing the antipolice brutality protests going on at the time and realizing the impossibil­ity of socially-distancing a crowd that last year reached an estimated 100,000. Estimates of previous crowds have been triple that.

“We knew that two days before the inaugurati­on, regardless of who won, that the march could have attracted up to half a million people,” said Renee Watson, who chairs the city's MLK Commission.

Rather than do nothing, the group hired a filmmaker to bring the march to life with a 90-minute film to be broadcast locally and beyond on Youtube or via a cellphone app.

For Houston's Black Heritage Society, there was no doubt that something would take the place of its annual march once its in-person version – developed to mark the renaming of a local street as Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard – was canceled for the first time in 43 years.

“We could not sit on our hands and prevent COVID or anything else from recognizin­g this great man,” said Sylvester Brown, the society's executive director.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Martin Luther King Jr., center left with arms raised, marches with other civil rights protesters during the March on Washington on Aug. 28, 1963.
AP FILE Martin Luther King Jr., center left with arms raised, marches with other civil rights protesters during the March on Washington on Aug. 28, 1963.

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