A birthday for King. . . by Rep John Conyers, Jr, D r. King's stature rests on many other qualities, a singular self-disci­ pline and steadiness; an unshakable fa ith in the basic goodness o f h u ­ The sovereignty o f the people is man beings; a single-minded dedica the central purpose of the American lion to raising up the lives o f the dis­ system o f g o vern m en t. T h a t pur* advantages; his inspiring and unfor­ pose at various limes in our history g ettab le speech; and exceptio nal has manifested itself in public p ro ­ courage. His politics was harnessed test and petitioning o f our govern­ to an overriding m oral force, as he ment for the redress o f grievances. led the B irm in g ham m ovem ent in D r. King was the preeminent leader 1963 to end legal segregation, the o f popular political action in m od­ Selma m ovem ent to w in fu ll p o li­ ern h is to ry. In p racticin g n o n -v i­ tical rights, and the other campaigns olent, direct action he em bodied a o f conscience in M o ntg om ery and great historical tradition— indeed, a elsewhere to end segregation in great Am erican tradition (hat o rig ­ pub lic places, overcom e housing inated with the Pilgrim 's settlement and school discrim ination, and win in the 17th centry, that continued w ith the Boston Tea P arty on the a belter life for all people. History thrust the young m inister in to the eve o f the A m eric an R e v o lu tio n , leadership o f the M ontgom ery bus and that in one form or another was boycott, after Rosa Parks, a young ex e m p lifie d in the p ub lic lives o f black woman, returning one evening Thomas Jefferson and Henry David from her work, refused to turn over Thoreau, among other Americans. her seat on the bus she was tra ve l­ In all o f his activities during the ing. " I f you protest courageously, c iv il rights m o ve m e n t. D r. King and yet w ith dignity and C hristian spoke fo r all people. ‘ Black and lo ve," D r. King told the assembled W h ite T o g e th e r— W e Shall O v e r­ at the first mass meeting o f the 1955 co m e ,” was M a rtin Luther King's boycott. credo to the last. It took some A m ­ " W h e n the h is to ry books are ericans a long time to recognize his w ritten in f u tu r e generations, the cred o , but it was fin a lly a c k ­ h istorians w ill have to pause an d now ledged, as people throughout say, 'There lived a great people— a the world had acknowledged it from B lack p e o p le — who in je c te d new the beginning, when President L yn ­ meaning and dignity into the veins don Johnson joined w ith him and o f civilization. ’ ” the other p articip an ts o f the civil The combination o f a few o f these rights movement. I do not think it is qualities w ould en title any in d iv i­ an exaggeration to say that Dr. King dual to a large measure o f respect. helped change the face o f America. Yet his greatness reached behond I am aware that (he public holiday is even these qualities. The quality that an honor that, heretofore, has been above the rest touched the hearts of reserved o nly fo r presidents and an e n tire w o rld was his sense o f great national events. M ay I respect­ hope, and his courage in acting on fully suggest that this honor also be that hope, whatever the obstacles. conferred on Dr. King, who was the In this he reached out to hundreds leader o f the greatest m odern ex­ o f m illio n s o f people whose lives ample o f popular political action in were filled, instead, with suffering, this country, the civil rights revolu­ disappointment, and despair. "This tion. is our h o p e," D r. King said on the The heroic dimension steps o f the L in c o ln M e m o ria l in August, 1963. of Dr. King'« life M a r tin L u th e r K in g , J r ., pos­ "This is the fa ith I go back to the South with. W ith this fa ith we w ill sessed extraordin ary qualities. He be able to hew out o f the mountain was a deeply religious man, the son o f despair a stone o f hope . la n d / and grandson o f tw o p ro m in e n t transform the jan g lin g discords o f m inisters at whose ch u rc h — the o u r n a tio n in to a b e a u tifu l sym ­ Ebene/er Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia— he too became a minister. phony o f brotherhood. “ H is tra in in g in theology le d 'fr’om In 1964 Dr. King was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize; the third black A tla n ta 's M o rc h o o s e t’oflege and person, tw elfth Am erican, and the Pennsylvania's Crozer Theological youngest person ever to achieve this Seminary through the University o f supreme world honor. Pennsylvania and H arvard to Bos­ ton U niversity, where he earned a Going beyond being Doctor o f Philosophy degree. In his a black spokesmen religious practice, in his preaching In the last years o f his life, M artin the social gospel— the teaching that Luther King, Jr., spoke out increas­ it is m an's d u ty not only to have ingly against the war in V ietn am . fa ith , but also to serve others (ac­ M any, including some o f his closest cording to Luke, " to heal the brok­ advisors, questioned his judgment en hearted, to free the captives, to set at liberty them that arc bruised” ) in getting involved in this most con­ — he help I transform the religious tro versial issue o f the day. " O v e r the past two years, as I have moved life o f the American people and, in­ deed. o f peoples th ro u g h o u t the to break the betrayal o f my own si­ lences," Dr. King said. world. Dr. King'« contribution to American Ufa ' 'as I have called f o r ra d ic al de­ p a rtu re s f r o m the d e s tru c tio n in Vietnam. many persons have ques­ tioned me about the wisdom o f my p a th . . . . Prove and civil rights d o n 't mix. they say----- l a m greatly sad­ dened. f o r such questions mean that the inquirers have not really known me. m y c o m m itm e n t o r m y c a ll­ ing. " D r. King was an opponent o f the war because o f its terrible cost in hu­ man lives, becaue it threatened to b ring the U n ite d Stales and the Soviet Union to the edge o f nuclear w ar, and because it was destroying the promise held in "th e war against poverty," as energies and resources were being diverted from that struggle to fight in Vietnam. Dr. King refused to permit others to define the issues and the struggles that engaged his life. He refused to be typecast as a civ il rights leader who had no business to question the government about its foreign p o l­ icies. For him the civil rights strug­ gle was inextricably linked to justice and peace. " I am still co n vinced ," he said a few months before his as­ sassination, " th e struggle f o r peace a n d the struggle f o r civil rights as we call it in Am erica happened to be tied to ­ gether I fee l that the people who are w orking f o r c iv il rig h ts are w orking f o r peace; I fe e t th a t the people working f o r peace are w ork­ ing f o r civil rights and justice. " The Civil Rights movement and justlca M artin Luther King, Jr.'s tireless efforts in the north and south were largely responsible for the vitality of the civ il rights m ovem ent and the passage o f the landmark civil rights laws in the 1960s It may be said that his counsel influenced Presidents Kennedy and Johnson in m oving (hem to w a rd leadership on c iv il rights. His last activity, before his death, was the Poor People's C am p aign . " W e have developed an underclass in this n a t io n ," D r. King said in 196«, " a n d unless this underclass is made a working class, we are going to continue Io have problems. The bitterness is very deep as a result o f these problems. " C ivil rights was justice, and ju s­ tice c iv il rig hts, to D r. K in g , and justice was conceived in broad terms, including economic justice, the right to a job and the right to a deceni wage for a job done well. He went to Mem phis in A p ril, 1965 to give his support to the s a n ita tio n workers who were calling for better conditions. Dr King and other ministers saw the need to create an institution that w ould be strong and respected enough to conduct the struggle for ju s lic . The Southern C h ris tia n I cadcrship Conference (S C L C ) was conceived is that institution. Its cor­ nerstone was the doctrine o f non-vi­ olent civil disobedience, the w illing­ ness to call in to question unjust laws, take responsibility fo r one's actions in doing so, but always to conduct the struggle on the highest moral and educational level. M any fo llo w e rs q uestioned w hether change in A m e ric a w ou ld come about non-violently. " W e must fo r­ ever conduct o u r struggle on the high plane o f d ig n ity and d is ci­ pline,” D r. King said at the Lincoln M em orial in 196. "W e must not allow our creative protests to degenerate into physical violence. M a n y o f o u r w hite brothers, as evidenced by their pre­ sence here today, have come to real­ ize that their destiny is tied up with our destiny. We cannot walk alone. We ca n n o t tu rn b a c k . . . . N o , no, we are not satisfied, and we will not be satisfied u n til justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream. " Dr. King the teacher L ik e the great teachers b efo re him, his guiding lights—Christ, Soc­ rates, G a n d h i— M a r tin L u th er King, Jr. engaged individuals in a process o f seeking after the tru th , which necessarily was a process o f seeking after the good. He was con­ vinced o f the basic goodness o f indi­ viduals, but he also knew that ignor­ ance was w idespread and change frig htenin g M a n y critics accused D r. King o f fo m en tin g violence thorugh his actions. They were un­ able to see that the tragic violence that occurred during the civil rights struggle did not arise out o f the civil disobedience o f D r. K in g ’ s m ove­ ment, but out o f the conditions o f anger, antagonism, tension, and vi­ olence that existed very close to the surface o f everyday life . In D r. King's w ords, the tension that a l­ ready existed had to be "exposed, with all the tension its exposure cre­ ates, to the lig h t o f hum an c o n ­ science and the air of national opin­ ion before it can be c u re d ." " Y o u express a great deal o f anxiety over our willingness to break law s," Dr. King wrote a group o f clergymen as he sat in the Birmingham City Jail in April, 1963; " T h is is c e rta in ly a le g itim a te concern O ne m ay w ell ask: 'H o w can you ad vo cate b reakin g some laws and obeying others?' The answer lies in the fa c t that there are two types o f laws: ju s t and unjust ...in term s o f St. Thom as Aqwumas. an unjust law is a human law that is not rooted in eternal law Any law that uplifts human person­ a lity is ju s t A ny law that degrades hum an p e rs o n a lity is unju st. One who breaks an unjust law must do so openly, lovingly, an d with a willingness to accept the penalty. ” W hile in jail in Birm ingham, Dr, K ing said he never felt m ore like being a full partner in the making of American law as when he was sitting in the Birmingham jail. Lcronc Bennett, the historian and Dr. King's biographer, has written: " H is grace, like G andhi's grows out o f a complicated relation not to oppression, but to the an cient scourges o f man. to pam , to su ffer­ ing, to death. Men who conquer the f e r a r o f these things in themselves acqu ire e x tra o rd in a ry p o w er over themselves and over others. Rev­ erend M a rtin l.u th er King, Jr., has taught us not only how to die, but also, and m ore in m p o rta n llv, how to live. " Commemorating Dr. King M a n in Luther King, Jr's memory is honoreu in a great many different ways, at home and abroad. Thirteen States, as well as most m ajor cities in the United States, honor Dr. King eith er th ro ug h pub lic holidays or days o f observance. In the 94th Congress both Houses came close to resolving to have a statue or bust placed in the C apito l. Because D r. K in g ’s m emory is honored by peo­ ples th ro u g h o u t the w o rld , his gravesitc in A tla n ta has become a national shrine at which world lead­ ers have paid their respects. In each Congress fro m the 90th Congress onward, I have introduced in the House o f Representatives a b ill to designate M a r tin L u th er King', Jr.'s birthday a national holi­ day. This legislation already has 105 cosponsors in the 9 6 lh Congress. S im ila r leg is la tio n sponsored by Senator Birch Bayh has been intro ­ duced this year in the Senate, and has Io d ate 19cosponsors. We ought to have a way to honor this hum an being and re a ffirm the ideals he lived and died for. To hon­ or him through a n ation al holiday w ou ld also, o f course, bestow a great honor on black Americans and represent an o ther step fo rw a rd in reconciling the lives and dreams o f all the peoples w ho com pose the A m erican n atio n . Designating his birthdate a national holiday would create an event for all Am ericans. For D r. K ing ch am pio ned justice and dignity for all Am ericans. He exem plified a very special ideal in human history— the ideal o f serving o n e ’ s fe llo w hum an beings in the ways o f freed om and ju s tic e. In teaching us how to live in justice and freedom, and how to die as well, he taught us a great deal, indeed. The Portland Public School District is honored to join in the celebration of the life of Martin Luther King. This city's school system takes this opportunity to reaffirm its dedication to provision of equal opportunity education and to affirmative action employment practices. Dr. King's inspirational leadership is taught in our schools as a vital part of this country's developing heritage. The Portland Public School Board moved unanimously in 1968 to changa the name of Highland Elementary School to Martin Luther King Elementary School out of reapect for the memory of Dr. King. (Photo: Richard J Brown) Portland Observer, January 26, 1963 Page 11 y I