Long gone are the days when white American radicals turned their collective backs on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929-1968), and embraced Malcolm X and the Black Panthers. In those heady days during the late 1960s, King sounded, at least to young protesters against the War in Vietnam, like a reformer who belonged to the church, not a revolutionary from āthe hood.ā Indeed, King was a Baptist preacher and a civil rights activist who insisted on the power of loveā he meantĀ agapeĀ notĀ erosā and who was not a spokesman for Black Power, guerrilla warfare or violent revolution, though he wanted total āwarā through non-violent means to achieve social and economic equality.
āThe American racial revolution,ā he wrote in 1967āa year before he diedāāhas been a revolution to āget inā rather than to overthrow. We want a share in the American economy.ā
This January, when we celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. Dayāwhich was first observed in 1986āwe might look back at the man who worried about language and about figures of speech as much as he worried about moral issues, and who insisted āa leader has to be concerned with the problems of semantics.ā
In the preface to a recent book titledĀ To Shape a New World, that offers fifteen essays about King, the editors, Tommie Shelby and Brandon Terry, write that MLK has been both ritually celebrated and intellectualized marginalized and that his ālegacy has suffered collateral damage.ā They call, not for āhagiography,ā but for critical thinking and they remind us that āpatriarchy and sexismā didnāt make his list of āevils.ā Itās also worth saying that Kingās ālegacyā will be decided not only in the halls of academia but in the streets and wherever humans the world over confront plutocrats and the profit motive and aim to escape from the spiritual wasteland of the twenty-first century.
Kingās idea about leadership and problems of semantics came to him soon after he met with Stokely Carmichael and his comrades in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), They rubbed him the wrong way, but they also prompted him to revaluate his ideas and his values and to shift his beliefs. Indeed, while he rejected āBlack Powerā as a slogan and as a strategy, he recognized that āNegroesāāas he called themāwould have to have political clout or they would remain disenfranchised, trapped in poverty and excluded from the American Dream.
In 1967, in an essay titled āBlack Powerā which is included in his bookĀ Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?Ā King wrote that āone of the great problems that the Negro confronts is his lack of power.ā A year later in a speech entitled āAll Labor Has Dignity,ā which he delivered to union workers in Memphis, Tennessee, he said, unequivocally, āWe need power.ā He meant power in all its manifestations: economic, political, social and cultural.
Also, while he made fun of Franz Fanon as āa black psychiatrist from Martiniqueā who had screwy ideas about violence and liberation, he understood that Negroes would have to liberate themselves by reaching down into the āinner depthsā of their being and sign āwith the pen and ink of assertive selfhood his own emancipation proclamation.ā King called violence āthe twin of materialismā and wanted no part of either one.
Had he lived he might have moved closer to the Black Power movement and to the Black Panthers. After all, he was deeply moved by the generation of young black men who didnāt want to fight and die in Vietnam and who often refused to join the U.S. military. In his April 4, 1967 speech in which he denounced his own government āas the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today,ā he explained that he had walked and talked with āangry young menā who asked him, āWhat about Vietnam?ā
He went on to say, āI knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettoes,ā without first raising a voice against the war in Vietnam which he saw as a war that was āthe enemy of the poor.ā King might have become even more critical of the War in Vietnamāit lasted seven years after his deathāand more boisterous in his denunciations of āthe giant triplets of racism, materialism and militarism.ā But he was also a kind of prisoner of the civil rights movement, which he had led so well and for so long, from Montgomery to Birmingham to Selma. He had helped to orchestrate the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and to bring about the end of legal segregation in the South. He was rightfully proud of the achievements of the movement for integration, but he also exaggerated victories and underestimated the power of racists who wanted to disenfranchise blacks by any means necessary, including redistricting, intimidation and outright theft of the right to vote.
InĀ The Trumpet of ConscienceĀ (1968), King noted that we āwe totally disrupted the system, the lifestyle of Birmingham, and then of Selma,ā and broke the ācoalitionā of āunprogressive Northernersā and ārepresentatives of the rural South.ā Richard Nixon would bring that coalition back in his so-called āSouthern strategyā and so would successive Republican candidates for the presidency, from Reagan to Bush to Trump. The system King claimed to have broken seems to be alive in Jeff Sessions Alabama today, though it might not be well.
At the end of his life, King recognized that much remained to be done. āWhat does it profit a man to be able to eat at an integrated lunch counter if he doesnāt earn enough money to buy a hamburger and a cup of coffee?ā he asked. āWhat does it profit one to be able to attend an integrated school when he doesnāt earn enough money to buy his children school clothes?ā But he seemed to be unsure how to advance the cause and what role if any he had to play.
āI donāt know what will happen now,ā he said in a speech he delivered on April 3, 1968. āWeāve got some difficult days ahead.ā He sounded like a man who was bowing out of the struggle. āIt doesnāt matter with me now,ā he said in that same speech. āIāve seen the Promised Land. I may not get there with you.ā Two months earlier in a sermon at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, he told the congregation,Ā āI donāt want a long funeralā¦tell them not to mention I have a Nobel Peace Prizeā¦Iād like somebody to say thatā¦Martin Luther King, Jr., tried to love somebody.ā How sad he sounds!
Before he was assassinated in Memphis in April 1968, he was caught up as much as ever before in the language of love. He held on to many of the concepts that no longer captured the imaginations of young blacks and young whites, who accepted the invitation that the Panthers offered to join them in the revolution.
In Soul on IceĀ (1968), Eldridge Cleaver wrote that āThere is in America today a generation of young white youth that is truly worthy of a black mans respect, and this is a rare event in the foul annals of American history.ā I was part of that generation. Like many others my age, I turned away from King and his dream and toward the Panthers, many of whom were assassinated. In December 1969, I protested the murder of Fred Hampton and Mark Clark of the Chicago Panthers and was arrested and beaten in jail. It was hard to rally behind Kingās banner of āloveā when police murdered young black men and when corporations urged consumers to love cars, burgers, sneakers and more.
In the late 1960s, while Eldridge Cleaver, Huey Newton and Bobby Seale wanted black youth and white youth to band together, King argued, as late as 1967, that, āWhat is most needed is a coalition of Negroes and liberal whites that will work to make both parties truly responsive to the needs of the poor.ā
By 1968, he seemed to have given up on white liberals, but rather looked toward the black masses he called upon to boycott white-owned corporations. āWe are asking you tonight not to buy Coca-Colaā¦not to buy Sealtest milkā¦not to buyā¦Wonder Bread,ā he told workers in Memphis in April. He added, āTake your money out of the banks downtown.ā
That notion of withdrawing funds from banksā(which he calls ādowntownā and not āwhiteā)āand boycotting big corporations, derived from Gandhiās ideas about how to best win Indian independence from the British. In 1968, it wasnāt Gandhi who appealed to young African Americans and young whites, but rather Fanon, Che, Malcolm X and Mao.
āThese are revolutionary times,ā King observed in 1967, though he himself wasnāt exactly a revolutionary. After all, he argued that same year, that āThe Negro must show that the white man has nothing to fear for the Negro is willing to forgive.ā H. Rap Brown and Stokely Carmichael wanted what they called the āwhite power structureā to fear Black Power. As far back as 1848, revolutionaries wanted the bourgeois to fear the āspecter of revolution.ā
In his 2015 anthology of Kingās writings and speeches, entitledĀ The Radical King, Professor Cornel West makes a case for King as a ārevolutionary,ā though he adds that he was also a āChristian.ā West goes on to say that King was āa warrior for peace, a ādemocratic socialistā and a āspiritual warrior.ā King resists easy labeling. Cleaver misjudged him when he wrote that he āturned tailā at Selma. For Cleaver, King was merely one of many heroes on a list that included Nkrumah, Robert Moses, Ho Chi Minh, W. E. B. Dubois and James Foreman.
Professor West admires King as deeply as he abhors Obama, whom he accuses of a ābetrayalā of āeverythingā that King stood for. What he doesnāt say and that he might have said is that if it were not for Martin Luther King and his wife Coretta, there would have been no Obama in the White House. King paved the way for Barack. He might have seen Obama as a kind of turncoat, but he was too kind and too loving to denounced him. In January 2019, on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, I will remember King as a kind of utopian who wanted to create āthe beloved communityā and who realized the dangers that await movements for social change. āThe postcolonial period is more difficult and precarious than the colonial struggle itself,ā he wrote. Fifty years after his death, that observation is as insightful and as relevant as ever. In 1967, he noted that, āthis may well be mankindās last chance to choose between chaos and community.ā Now, we are offered mankindās last chance to choose between surviving on a planet thatās burning up or going down to destruction.
Jonah Raskin is the author ofĀ For The Hell of It: The Life and Times of Abbie HoffmanĀ andĀ American Scream: Allen Ginsbergās āHowlā and the Making of the Beat Generation.
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