USA TODAY International Edition

Commemorat­ions of 1963 march miss the mark

Focus more on black- on- black crime

- DeWayne Wickham writes on Tuesdays for USA TODAY. DeWayne Wickham @ DeWayneWic­kham

I don’t know what to make of this remembranc­e of the 1963 March on Washington — one of the civil rights movement’s most propitious and catalytic events.

I don’t know why the focus on this important anniversar­y was watered down with multiple, commemorat­ive marches — one on Wednesday, the actual anniversar­y, and the other four days earlier on a day that had no historic relevance. I suspect it had to do with competitio­n for the national spotlight and not the excuse offered up by some that the original march took place on a Saturday. It didn’t.

I can’t figure out whether the Republican National Committee’s decision to hold its own observance of the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom was a bad joke, or a cynical diversion from its efforts to frustrate and intimate black voters. In the past, the GOP has attempted to use its misread of King’s “I Have a Dream” speech to claim the civil rights icon shared the Republican­s’ opposition to affirmativ­e action.

COLOR VS. CHARACTER

In that address, King said he dreamed that a time would come when his four children “will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” That was his dream. But his reality was very different.

“Whenever this issue of compensato­ry or preferenti­al treatment for the Negro is raised, some of our friends recoil in horror,” King wrote in his 1964 book, Why We Can’t Wait. “The Negro should be granted equal- ity, they agree; but he should ask nothing more. On the surface, this appears reasonable, but it is not realistic. For it is obvious that if a man is entered at the starting line in a race 300 years after another man, the first would have to perform some impossible feat in order to catch up with his fellow runner.” EXCESS FOCUS ON TRAYVON I can’t understand why more focus has been placed on the tragic killing of Trayvon Martin and the racial profiling injustice of New York City’s stop- and- frisk law, than the blackon- black violence that takes thousands of lives every year.

I don’t know why the leaders of this celebratio­n can’t bring themselves to make a campaign to end this carnage their highest priority.

“We must not allow our creative protest to degenerate into physical violence,” King said near the end of the 1963 march program. But today, those words can also be a compelling appeal against the self- destructio­n of the black- on- black killings that pile up more black bodies in a year than the white lynch mobs amassed during the entire 20th century.

Sure, getting more jobs for blacks is an important goal. Yes, more needs to been done to close the black- white achievemen­t gap in the nation’s public schools. And more young blacks need to be given a fair chance to fund their college education. In many of these efforts, King said in Why We Can’t Wait that the federal government must “move resolutely to the side of the freedom movement.”

But more than anything else, King’s message from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on that Wednesday afternoon in 1963 — and in the book he wrote soon after — ought to inspire today’s civil rights leaders to get their act together, and should put to flight the Republican­s who try to hijack his memory.

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