Friday, April 4, 2008

Martin Luther King

MEMPHIS, Tenn. - On the 40th anniversary of his assassination, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was remembered Friday in the city where he died as a man who came to Memphis “to lead us to a better way.”
Presidential candidates, civil rights leaders, labor activists and thousands of citizens were coming together to honor King for his devotion to racial equality and economic justice.
King was cut down on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel on April 4, 1968, while helping organize a strike by Memphis sanitation workers, then some of the poorest of the city’s working poor.

Members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, which represented the workers then and now, marched Friday from their downtown headquarters to the motel. A line of several hundred people carrying umbrellas in a steady rain set off on the mile-long route. Nonviolence as a weapon“Dr. King was like Moses,” said Leslie Moore, a 61-year-old sanitation worker who began working for the city in 1968. “God gave Moses the assignment to lead the children of Israel across the Red Sea. He sent Dr. King here to lead us to a better way.”
As the Rev. C.T. Vivian, a former King associate, said earlier: “Here was a man who understood nonviolence at a depth that I had never known before.”
Baxter Leach, 68, a retired sanitation worker, also took part in the strike, which marked the beginning of the end for white-only domination of government and civil affairs in Memphis. Before the strike, black sanitation workers labored long hours for little pay and could be fired at the whim of white bosses.
“We honor this day. We march,” Leach said, adding that King helped all Americans. “He was for poor folks. He wasn’t for just one color. He was for all colors.”
Marchers packed the courtyard in front of the motel, now the National Civil Rights Museum, for a rally after their mile-long walk, standing shoulder to shoulder under a sea of multicolored umbrellas.
Speakers urged the crowd to follow King’s example by working to help the poor, improve public schools and provide housing for the homeless.
Attending rallies isn’t enough, said Dwight Montgomery, local director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a national civil rights group King helped create.
“After the dust has settled, after the cameras are gone ... what will this crowd do?” Montgomery asked.
In Atlanta, Bernice King and Martin Luther King III placed a wreath at the national historic site where their father and mother, Coretta Scott King, are buried. They were expected to travel to Memphis later in the day.
A special exhibit opened at the historic site chronicling the final days and hours before King’s death, as well as his funeral procession through his hometown five days later.
McCain, Clinton in MemphisIn a statement, President Bush said that 40 years ago, “America was robbed of one of history’s most consequential advocates for equality and civil rights. ... We have made progress on Dr. King’s dream, yet the struggle is not over.”
Presidential candidates Hillary Rodham Clinton and John McCain were scheduled to take part in later Memphis events that were to include an afternoon “recommitment march” and the laying of wreaths at the motel. Sen. Barack Obama spoke of King from Indiana.
lesson.

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