(Our regular four readers will recognize our annual tribute to the Rev. Martin Luther King. We include it today so that or growing readership – now seven – will read it for the first time.)
"Anybody here seen my old friend Martin?
Can you tell me where he's gone?
He freed a lot of people,
But it seems the good they die young.
I just looked 'round and he's gone."
"Abraham, Martin and John"
written by Dick Holler and first recorded by Dion
By Juan Montoya
There was in our home a black and white photograph of the Rev. Martin Luther King in a pensive pose, a slight sheen on his wide forehead and his hand covering the lower portion of his face in introspection.
My kids invariably asked me who he was once they reached an age of curiosity of the world around them.
My stock answer was that the picture was of a man – now dead – who spent his life fighting for all people to have the same rights everyone else did. That included blacks, browns, yellows, reds, poor whites and all shades in between.
That framed photograph dates back to the days I used to publish a weekly with the late state representative Henry Sanchez. We were doing a piece on the anniversary of his death and the celebration of the national holiday and we needed a good picture. We found one in the possession of then-Brownsville Navigation District commissioner Evelon Dale. She loaned us the photo – dedicated to her by a federal judge, I believe – and we used it in our next edition.
We held on to the photo intending to return it to Evelon, but things got in the way, like Henry's death, elections, etc., Every time I ran into Evelon I remember the photo and always remind myself that I would return it the first chance I got. In fact, just this past year, I ran into her and returned it. Thank you, Evelon.
Many friends asked me about the photo and asked why I don't have one of the Virgin of Guadalupe, Cesar Chavez, Emiliano Zapata, or even Che, instead of the good reverend. You know, something Latin.
Those of us who grew up in the tumultuous 60s and 70s are children of the whirlwind of history. We went through the Cuban missile crisis, the threat of nuclear destruction of the planet, the assassination of John Kennedy, his brother Robert, the advent of the transistor radio, the Beatles and Stones, the moon landing, and Mighty Rock and Roll.
We also experienced an upturning social upheaval as the nation struggled to come to grips with a devastating war (Vietnam) that touched our barrios and rent the social fabric and public opinion. We had the various splinters in the black community with the likes of the Black Panthers, Malcom X, and, of course, Martin.
His
adherence to the principle of nonviolence set him in an island apart in
a sea of turmoil with half the world at war, the Peace Movement,
Malcom's call for black liberation "by any means necessary," a brash
heavyweight boxing champion of the world who changed his name from
Cassius Clay to Mohammad Ali refusing to join the Army saying that "No
Viet Cong ever called me ni--er," the burning of draft cards, and the
revelations of the Pentagon Papers that the Vietnam war had, after all,
been an unnecessary one.
And
here came Martin leading protests using a middle-aged and diminutive
Rosa Parks fighting to simply sit in front of a bus, blacks getting
beaten by Bull Connor's deputies, chewed up by police dogs and assaulted
with water cannons just for asking for the right to seat at a lunch
counter or to register to vote.
And
we saw the backlash from the status quo with jailings, beatings,
drummed up charges and FBI harassment and surveillance. Little black
girls died in the bombing of Baptist churches. Supporters of the civil
rights movement were kidnapped, tortured, and murdered in back country
roads in the South by hoodlums of the KKK.
King's answer to that violence against his people was unbelievable.
"Returning
violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a
night already devoid of stars.... Hate cannot drive out hate: only love
can do that." –Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community
“The
ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort
and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and
controversy.” –Strength to Love
“I
believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love will have the final
word in reality. That is why right, temporarily defeated, is stronger
than evil triumphant.” –Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech
“I
submit that an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is
unjust, and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order
to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for the law.” –Letter from Birmingham Jail
“I submit to you that if a man hasn't discovered something he will die for, he isn't fit to live.” –Detroit
“We have been repeatedly faced with a cruel irony of watching Negro and white boys on TV screens as they kill and die together for a nation that has been unable to seat them together in the same school room.” –Why I Am Opposed to the War in Vietnam
For
this, he was shot April 4, 1968 in Memphis by a sniper who no one
believed was acting alone. We had lost a great voice of reason in the
world and as we headed into the 1970s, there was no one left to take up
his mantle. Bobby Kennedy was next for the assassin's bullet and it took
Richard Nixon to pull us, bloody and angry, from the Vietnam quagmire.
Some of us still haven't been able to emerge from that abyss. In trying
to assuage the loss, we have stumbled blindly into other useless wars
that have drained our blood and treasure. Will there be another one like
Martin who will step in and make us see reason now that he's gone?
We
didn't know it then, but we had lived and experienced the existence of
one of mankind's greatest orators and a purveyor of peace.
Have a happy birthday Martin. And thank you.
7 comments:
Martin Luther the King era negro. Bola de bueyes!
The only thing you need to know about MLK is don't live near any of his streets.
Fact: Half of all of MLK's speeches were plagiarized. He was known by some to steal other peoples ideas; today it is called the theft of intellectual property.
Shut up Eduardo Paz Martinez. All of your books have plagiarism in them....vato bofo!
It's too bad that many Brownsville residents don't know or care about MLK. He opened doors for Hispanics too. I hope to one day live in a city where local history is appreciated from different perspectives and white supremacists like Jefferson Davis are not glorified.
I am one of the millions that does not give 1 shit about MLK Day.
Arizona does not recognize nor celebrate MLK. I like the state of Arizona....19th at 11:19...I second that emotion.
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