Imagining Martin
Luther King, Jr. At 75:
A Day For Reflection
by David Krieger*, January, 2004
Martin Luther King, Jr. would have been
75 years old today had he lived to grow older. At 75, he certainly
would have been a wise man. He was already wise well beyond his
years at 39 when he was assassinated. How valuable it would have
been for our country and the world to have had him here to speak
and take action on the issues of the day.
Above all else, Dr. King was a man of justice
and peace. One can imagine how, were he able to see us today,
he would have recoiled at the increasing gap between rich and
poor in our country and the world; at the tax cuts for the rich
and the deceptions by political leaders to achieve them; at the
abuses of corporate leaders who cheated both their shareholders
and their employees; and, most of all, at the lies of political
leaders to take the country to war yet again.
He certainly would have remembered the Vietnam
War that he spoke out against so eloquently, and he would have
been struck by the similarities between that war and the war in
Iraq. He would have been deeply saddened to see that America had
built its military on the backs of the poor, and that US soldiers
were still coming home in body bags.
Dr. King’s 75th birthday is a time for reflection
about who we are as a people and who we want to be. It is a time
to strengthen our resolve to work, as he did, for justice, peace
and human dignity. It is a time to strengthen our resolve to create
a just and decent country that upholds civil and human rights
for all. It is a time to recognize our responsibilities to lead
by example, not by force. It is a time to work to end the double
standards of “do as I say, not as I do” policies that
shame our country and tarnish it in the eyes of the world.
What would he have said about our Congress giving
away its Constitutional authority to make war to the President?
What would he have said about the President leading the country
to war against Iraq illegally and without the approval of the
United Nations Security Council?
What would he have said about our continued reliance
on nuclear weapons long after the end of the Cold War, and our
plans to conduct research on mini-nukes and “bunker-busting”
nuclear weapons? What would he have said about the allocation
of nearly half of our discretionary income as a society to prepare
for and engage in war? What would he have said about our lack
of universal health care, the breakdown of our educational system
and the growing number of homeless in the streets?
Dr. King is not here to speak out and take action,
but I can imagine that he would have been angered and deeply saddened
by the state of our country and the world. He likely would have
been disgusted by the poor quality of leadership and the continued
prevalence of greed in our nation. He would have wanted us to
do more and give more of ourselves. He would have called upon
us to strengthen our efforts to build a peaceful and just world.
Although he is not here to inspire us, that should not stop us
from hearing the echoes of his deep, resonant voice. Although
he is not here to lead, that should not stop us from acting.
The best birthday present we could give to Martin
Luther King, Jr. is our commitment to his dream the dream of a
more just and decent America, a country that could lead in justice
and decency rather than military expenditures and number of billionaires.
Remembering him helps us to realize how far we have strayed from
our course and far we have to go.
YOU ARE NOT ONE BUT MANY
Remembering Martin Luther King,
Jr.
Your deep voice still hangs in the air,
Melting the cowardly silence.
You are the one standing solidly there
Looking straight in the face of violence.
You are the one who dreams
That this nation will honor its creed.
You are the one who steps forward.
You are the one to bleed.
You are not one but many
Unwilling to cower or crawl.
You are the one who will take no less
Than a world that is just for all.
David Krieger
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*David Krieger is president
of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation. He is the co-author of Choose
Hope: Your Role in Waging Peace in the Nuclear Age and Peace:
100 Ideas. For more information on Martin Luther King’s
75th birthday click
here.
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