The Oklahoman

COMMITED TO PEACE

SCHOLARS SAY KING'S MESSAGE WAS ABOUT MORE THAN ENDING RACISM

- By Melissa Erickson

There's more to learn about Martin Luther King Jr., a towering figure in American history and an icon of social justice. As the nation celebrates his birthday, a national holiday on the third Monday of January each year, it's time to delve deeper into his legacy and how many misunderst­and his life's work to end racial injustice. • “How King is taught and celebrated distorts the reality of the movement and how people opposed it. It clouds our ability to see the past, and that affects the present,” said Jeanne Theoharis, professor of political science at Brooklyn College of CUNY and author of “A More Beautiful and Terrible History: The Uses and Misuses of Civil Rights History.” • One glaring error is the idea that most Americans supported King and his work, which is far from the truth. Blasted as “mob rule,” King's efforts were disapprove­d of by a majority of Americans at the time, Theoharis said.

A Gallup poll from 1966, two years before he was assassinat­ed, found that two-thirds of Americans had an unfavorabl­e opinion of King.

“There's a notion that most decent people supported King, but that is just not borne out,” Theoharis said.

“Dr. King was villainize­d as a civil rights advocate during the civil rights movement,” said Shayla C. Nunnally, professor in the Department of Political Science and chair of the Africana Studies Program at University of Tennessee, Knoxville. “White Southerner­s, especially, detested his attempt to change a centuries-old system of black subjugatio­n in slavery and Jim Crow.”

While King was adamantly committed to nonviolenc­e and never once implied countering oppression with violence, he was more radical in his views than many understand, said Ryan M. Jones, educator/historian at the National Civil Rights Museum.

“The dream Dr. King had goes much further than the words he delivered at the Lincoln Memorial,” he said. “By the end of his life, he was seen as a threat to national security by the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover. He challenged the U.S. government to spread the wealth of the country to the people who really needed it. This was far from passive in the mid-1960s. His charisma and celebrity paved the way for younger, more progressiv­e activists to have a platform. He gave his life – the ultimate sacrifice. There is no level of risk greater than that.”

Over the years, King's legacy has been whitewashe­d and detoothed, Theoharis said. While King is beloved, he was not benign.

King was a disrupter, and the civil rights movement was meant to disrupt society in order to upset the status quo and achieve change, Theoharis said.

“The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was a minister. When people think of ministers they are not thinking of radicals, but Jesus was a radical and so was Martin Luther King,” said Michael Honey, professor of humanities at the University of Washington Tacoma where he teaches African-American and labor history and Martin Luther King Jr. Studies. “Most Americans still celebrate King as a civil rights leader, but our scholarshi­p clearly shows King as a pastor who followed the Social Gospel [movement] of Jesus, calling for society to take care of `the least of these.' We need to embrace his nonviolenc­e of agape love (love for all humankind) and to end the violence of institutio­nal racism, economic injustice, war and militarism. We can see the disastrous results of our failure to do that this week and throughout the Trump era,” Honey said, referring to Jan. 6's riots at the US Capitol.

King's famous “I Have A Dream” speech is remembered as a call to end racial injustice but has a deeper meaning. It is not just about an end to segregatio­n; it's a call for a radical restart to the American system, Honey said.

 ?? PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY KAYLA FILION/USA TODAY NETWORK; GETTY IMAGES ??
PHOTO ILLUSTRATI­ON BY KAYLA FILION/USA TODAY NETWORK; GETTY IMAGES

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