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15 January 2005
More
Than a Dreamer
By Paul Rockwell
Dr.
Martin Luther King's oft-quoted "I have a dream" speech was not about
far-off visions, it was a call to action.
Every year, millions of Americans pay tribute to the
memory of Dr. Martin Luther King. We often forget, however, that King was the
object of derision when he was alive. At key moments in his quest for civil
rights and world peace, the corporate media treated King with hostility. Dr.
King's march for open housing in Chicago, when the civil rights movement entered
the North, caused a negative, you've-gone-too-far reaction in the Northern press.
And Dr. King's stand on peace and international law, especially his support
for the self-determination of third world peoples, caused an outcry and backlash
in the predominantly white press.
In his prophetic anti-war speech at Riverside Church
in 1967 (recorded and filmed for posterity but rarely quoted in today's press),
King emphasized four points: 1) that American militarism would destroy the war
on poverty; 2) that American jingoism breeds violence, despair, and contempt
for law within the United States; 3) the use of people of color to fight against
people of color abroad is a "cruel manipulation of the poor"; 4) human
rights should be measured by one yardstick everywhere.
The Washington Post denounced King's anti-war position,
and said King was "irresponsible." In an editorial entitled "Dr.
King's error," The New York Times chastised King for going beyond the allotted
domain of black leaders - civil rights. TIME called King's anti-war stand "demogogic
slander ... a script for Radio Hanoi." The media responses to Dr. King's
calls for peace were so venomous that King's two recent biographers - Stephen
Oates and David Garrow - devoted whole chapters to the media blitz against King's
internationalism.
Dr. King may be an icon within the media today, but
there is still something upsetting about the way his birthday is observed. Four
words - "I have a dream" - are often parrotted out of context every
January 15th.
King, however, was not a dreamer - at least not the
teary-eyed, mystic projected in the media. True, he was a visionary, but he
specialized in applied ethics. He even called himself "a drum major for
justice," and his mission, as he described it, was, "to disturb the
comfortable and comfort the disturbed." In fact, the oft-quoted "I
have a dream" speech was not about far-off visions. In his speech in Washington,
D.C., August 28, 1963, Dr. King confronted the poverty, injustice, and "nightmare
conditions" of American cities. In its totality, the "I have a dream"
speech was about the right of oppressed and poor Americans to cash their promissary
note in our time. It was a call to action.
In 1986, Jesse Jackson wrote an essay on how Americans
can protect the legacy of Dr. King. Jackson's essay on the trivialization, distortion
and emasculation of King's memory is one of the clearest, most relevant appreciations
in print of Dr. King's work. Jackson wrote: "We must resist this the media's
weak and anemic memory of a great man. To think of Dr. King only as a dreamer
is to do injustice to his memory and to the dream itself. Why is it that so
many politicians today want to emphasize that King was a dreamer? Is it because
they want us to believe that his dreams have become reality, and that therefore,
we should celebrate rather than continue to fight? There is a struggle today
to preserve the substance and the integrity of Dr. King's legacy."
Today, the media often ignores the range and breadth
of King's teachings. His speeches - on economlc justice, on our potential to
end poverty, on the power of organized mass action, his criticism of the hostile
media, his opposition to U.S. imperialism (a word he dared to use) - are rarely
quoted, much less discussed with understanding. In fact, successors to Dr. King
who raise the same concerns today are again treated with sneers, and their "ulterior
motives" are questioned. A genuine appreciation of Dr. King requires respect
for the totality of his work and an ongoing commitment to struggle for peace
and justice today.
Paul
Rockwell, formerly assistant professor of philsophy at Midwestern
University, is a writer who lives in Oakland, California
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