The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Now more than ever, heed the words of Dr. King

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When I was in college, my roommate and I would together drive the six hours to our southern Illinois campus the day before the spring semester started.

Our tradition was that, while my friend took a turn driving, I would read aloud Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, which was printed in our local newspaper annually on the Monday commemorat­ing the activist.

That was a quarter of a century ago — before our first black president seemed to have made good on the promise of an America that could see beyond race.

It was at a time when, in public schools across the country, trotting out the “I Have a Dream” speech in mid-January and then discussing King — along with Rosa Parks and Jackie Robinson — during a few social studies lessons in February was considered super progressiv­e.

And it was long before African Americans would look critically at King’s life — such as his purported sexism and marital infideliti­es — and consider how his legacy of nonviolenc­e is often used to point out the failings of today’s more aggressive, less polite Black Lives Matter movement.

“I Have a Dream” holds up through the ages, but it’s not difficult to imagine that King would have hated his “day” being the prequel to a single month out of each year when black people are recognized as important, positive contributo­rs to the greatness of

America.

While the month does give saintly treatment to a handful of very important black icons, those same icons would probably be horrified to learn that Americans’ interest in outstandin­g, important and pivotal black people ended, more or less, in the ‘60s.

In a perfect world, Black History Month — like the months celebratin­g the heritage of women, Latinos/Hispanic, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders and Native Americans — would be every month, just like white history is celebrated.

Since perfection does not describe how history is taught in the public schools or reported in the media, it falls on us to seek out alternativ­e sources for informatio­n in February.

The Civil Rights History Project of the Library of Congress (www.loc.gov/collection­s/civilright­s-history-project/) is a great place to bookmark on your web browser.

This collection couldn’t make it easier to read an article or essay on a little corner of history, such as the role young people played in the fight for civil rights or how music fueled the movement.

Even more enticing are the many video-recorded oral histories of people who lived in the communitie­s struggling to win their civil rights and what their everyday lives were really like. Just prepare your chest to tighten — these are powerful, emotional stories.

This idea to explore black history might be one we return to, or it might fall by the wayside as we navigate busy, hectic lives. But, on Martin Luther King Jr.

Day, the chances are high that you’ll see a copy of his famous speech scroll across your news feed or posted in your social media streams and notificati­ons.

Take a moment to read through the speech. It’s not long. And it remains tragically relevant today.

While there’s no comparing living conditions for some African Americans in the Jim Crow South with the lowest-income blacks today, it’s still true that, regardless of educationa­l attainment, many often still live on a “lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity.”

And, for people of all races and ethnicitie­s, King’s words ring out as strongly today as ever, because now is absolutely still “the time to make justice a reality for all of God’s children.”

 ?? Columnist ?? Esther J. Cepeda
Columnist Esther J. Cepeda

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