|
Why There Will Never Be Another Dr. King
A sniper's bullet ended Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s life 39 years ago today--and the world changed. To see DiversityInc's video interview with Soledad O'Brien on the King papers, click here. I never thought to ask her what she must have felt at the time. I can only imagine the fear and doubt that she must have had in bringing a black child into a world where someone like Dr. King could be gunned down in cold blood, where women--and women who looked like my mother--were being hosed on the street and attacked by police dogs. She must have been at a loss, wondering why rules of logic, decency and empathy didn't apply because of the color of her skin.
Our images of Dr. King now are from grainy news reels that depict his marches and speeches. We remember him as the civil-rights leader who launched the Montgomery Bus Boycott in 1956. We know him because he was instrumental in organizing the March on
How much progress has been made in the 39 years since a sniper fatally shot Dr. King from a hotel balcony in So no, it's not 1968. But inequities still exist. Too often, access to opportunity is determined by the color of one's skin. And black mothers across the nation still are fearful of letting their black sons walk the streets after dark for fear of them becoming the next Sean Bell, Abner Louima or Amadou Diallo. Ever since Dr. King's death, there's been this call for black leaders to fill the gaping void left by his absence. With each subsequent generation, from Jesse Jackson to Al Sharpton to Barack Obama, someone has attempted to lay claim to the mantle of the next "black leader." But there will never be another Dr. King. He was shaped by the times in which he grew to prominence. The best we can hope for is for each of us to muster some measure of the courage he displayed. Sometimes that's as simple as calling a wrong a wrong and having the nerve to try and bring about change.
More from Today's Diversity News |