^ ^ ìn r tla n b ffihserucr Page A4 February 15. 2(X)6 BLACK HISTORY MONTH and the American Experience Opinion articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views o f The Portland Observer O pinion Honor Coretta Scott King by Continuing Her Legacy Bush critics at funeral were not out of line M athis In stark contrast to her h u s b a n d ’s f u n e ra l, C o re tta S cott K in g ’s h o m e g o in g s e rv ic e s w ere extravagant. Dr. M artin L uther K in g ’s services were held at Ebenezer Bap­ tist, an A tlanta church that is much sm aller and older than New Birth M issionary Baptist in suburban Atlanta, where Mrs. K ing’s ser­ vices were held. Then-president Lyndon B. Johnson didn’t attend Dr. K ing’s services; the current and three former presidents attended Mrs. K ings.’ This is not to say Mrs. It is more than hypocritical for President Bush to laud someone with values so very different from his own without acknowledging those differences. £ by J udge G reg King d id n ’t deserve the King’s funeral drew outside criti­ ceremonies awomanof cism for being too ‘political.’ Inside, her stature and grace, with her legacy, most certainly does. But, as yet another icon o f the Civil Rights M ovem ent passes on, we must do more than honor them with lavish funeral services. A truer, and much more fitting, tribute would be to ensure that Mrs. K ing’s com m it­ ment to social justice and nonvio­ lence lives on. Several o f the speakers at Mrs. however, 1 witnessed rousing ova­ tions after each political remark. What was Mrs. King if she w asn’t politi­ cal? She didn’t serve as an elected official, but she worked within and against the political system, along with Dr. King, to tear down racist Jim Crow laws and, after his assassina­ tion, to have his birthday declared a national holiday. The Rev. Joseph Lowery, who co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Council with Dr. King, was not out o f line for criticizing the war in Iraq and A m erica's treatment o f the poorduring his remarks. Mrs. King was a w om an w ho firm ly be­ lieved in nonviolent protest. She worked tirelessly on behalf o f the p o o r an d u n d e r s e rv e d . R ev . L ow ery’s com m ents served to re­ mind everyone ju st w ho Mrs. King w as and w hat she believed in. W hen form er President Jim m y C arter spoke o f H urricane Katrina an d th e w ay th e g o v e rn m e n t handled the disaster, he meant no disrespect. And, when he pointed out that the King family was once secretly w iretapped by the govern­ ment, he d id n ’t intend to be rude. Hurricane Katrina shined a much- needed light on the state o f race and poverty in this country and Living Up to America’s Ideals Coretta Scott King and a call to action A nisha D esai Every politician, news anchor and new spa­ per eulogized C oretta Scott King after her Jan. 30 death, praising her commitment tocivil rights. But how much attention did we pay to Mrs. K ing’s w ords and actions w hen she was alive? M ust it only be upon the passing o f our iconic leaders that we pause to grasp the depths o f racial inequality around us — a real and present danger w hic|| we ignore at our own peril? Mrs. King’scommitment was not ju st to a narrow definition o f civil rights as legal freedom from dis­ crim ination. She spoke up for eco­ nomic justice and peace, both be­ fore she met her late husband Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and after hir> death. In June 1968, she called upon American women to fight the three evils o f racism, poverty and war. In 1974, she formed the Full Em ploy­ ment Action Council, a broad coalition that advocated full em ploym ent and equal opportu­ nity. Recently, she urged President Bush to ask American corporations to put their resources behind the effort to help the poor. She recog­ nized the econom ic consequences o f m ilitarism and considered money spent on w eapons, rather than education and health care, money wasted. How sad that she did not live to see her vision becom e reality! At the tim e o f her pass­ ing, the African American unem ploym ent rate was more than double that o f whites; the jo b ­ by less recovery has been m ore jobless for some races than others. The m assive layoffs in the auto industry and the overall decline in m anu­ facturing have affected black w orkers espe­ cially hard. Black fam ilies who had painstak­ ingly risen from poverty through education and hard w ork are falling backw ards, losing health coverage and losing hom es to foreclo­ sure. Federal program s that have boosted prior generations into the middle class, such as Pell grants and housing subsidies, are being cut to pay for war and for tax cuts for the rich. And despite President B u sh 's lip service to narrow- Though more and more jo b s are located in the suburbs, beyond the reach o f public trans­ portation, one in four black fam ilies ow ns no car, compared with one in 14 white families. This disparity was tragically obvious during Hurri­ cane Katrina, as those left behind were over­ whelm ingly black and poor. Mrs. King’sdeathcom esrightafterD r. King’s national holiday, one w hich she fought so hard to achieve, and right before Black History Month. This brief reflective time o f the country's calendar sparks a variety o f valuable national forum s about civil rights. But too often our ------------- focus is on a few great historical figures, w hich obscures the need for all o f us to call on our country to live up to its ideals. All too often we w ait blindly for the one or two golden leaders to lead us from the storm. W e spend too much ti me lam enting the loss o f charism atic leaders o f the past. But as a Hopi teaching rem inds us, “We are the ones we have been waiting _ for.’’O ureveryday interactions and A observations are enough o f a rudi­ mentary tool kit to begin the work of spotlighting racial injustice. Everyday people made possible the victo­ ries o f the Civil Rights m ovem ent, and every­ day people can take the lead today. W e can best honor the memory o f C oretta Scott King, Dr. King and Rosa Parks by com m itting ourselves to challenge and close the racial w ealth divide. Everyday people made possible the victories of the Civil Rights movement, and everyday people can take the lead today. ing the divide after H urricane K atrina, he once again proposed cuts to the ladder o f opportu­ nity in his recent budget proposal. How sad that the last five years o f C oretta Scott K ing’s life were years o f backsliding on the progress she worked for all her life. W hile median incom e has fallen since 2000 for every racial group, it has fallen fastest for African Americans. W hile the typical white family gained six percent in net worth from 2001 to 2004, rising to $ 136,000, the typical black family gained not at all, rem aining at a dism al $20,(XX), according to the Federal Reserve. Anisha Desai is program director at United for a Fair Economy, a non-profit group that shows how concentrated wealth and power undermines the economy, corrupts democracy, deepens the racial divide and tears communi­ ties apart.. President B ush’s illegal dom estic spying program has com e under fire in recent months. C arter was simply pointing out how much more work rem ains to be done in the fight for social equality: If there is anyone w ho should apologize fortheirrem arks, perhaps it is President Bush him self. He stood before thousands o f m ourn­ ers and praised Mrs. King for her com m itm ent to social justice and equality. The com m ents are well- deserved, but it is more than hypo­ critical for President Bush to laud som eone with values so very dif­ ferent from his own w ithout ac­ know ledging those differences. Though her public appearances declined in recent years, it would be safe to say that Mrs. King did not approve o f the war in Iraq; she was appalled at the way so many A fri­ As I w atched TV , suddenly the flash “Drive by shooting at Benson High S chool” cam e across the screen. I found m yself beginning to shake and my heart beating at a fast pace. W hy, because not only did a friend o f my daughter attend Benson, she was a cheerleader and w as at the school’s basketball game with Jefferson on the night o f the shooting. I w aited 20 m in­ utes until the news cam e on, hop­ ing that I w ould not hear that 10 or more children have been shot, as has happened to oth er schools across the nation. If I w as going through this, I could only imagine w hat som e parents were going through. With summ er coming, will there be more shootings? W hat can we do as people o f the com m unity to stop this m adness? Som ething must be done to stop youth on a killing rage. W e cannot spank a child. Yet we live in a system that will beat our children, lock our children up, or talk our children into going to war to kill other people over a lie by President Bush. The youth cannot find w ork in the com m unity they live. They want to dress nice, have a nice car and w ant love and respect. So they get caught up in the drug gam e and with that com es jail, killing or death. I feel that we live in a system that cares less about the youth, espe­ cially with cuts for education and schools closing down. W hat can a youth do? If you have a business, adopt a youth and teach the child yourtrade. If the system really cared about youth, you w ould receive a tax w rite-off for doing this. W e must become self-dependent when it com es to our youth. Par­ ents, you should know if your child is talking gang talk or wearing gang colors. D on’t w ait until its too late and you end up looking at your son or daughter in a casket. If you do find your child representing the so- called hood, teach them that a bet­ ter alternative w ould be becom ing a law yer or doctor, som ething the hood needs. Let there be peace. Gary Clay Sr. Northeast Portland No Care for Our Own Last night I w atched a PBS pro­ gram that detailed the devastation on the G u lf Coast, specifically fo­ cusing on the shortage o f basic health care. The video was graphic <1, Ä * W- m eth becomes your d o tte d lin ç . « l i e s , you d e c id e . If y o u k n o w s o m e o n e w ith a m e th p ro b le m call 1 -800-923-H E L P . ? *E*. ■E2 Judge Gheg Mathis is national vice president o f Rainbow PUSH and a national board member o f the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Shooting at Benson ■ > ; w* can-A m ericans were forgotten in New O rleans as the flood w ater rushed in after H urricane Katrina and that she was opposed to the P resident’s dom estic spying pro­ gram. By speaking as if he and Mrs. King had shared ideals and a co m ­ mon vision for A m erica, President Bush, in effect, insulted all she w orked for. As w e celebrate Black History M onth, let’s take tim e to not only rem em ber but honor - through our actions -M rs. King and all o f the soldiers from the Freedom M ove­ ment, past and present. True he­ roes should continue to live on . long after they are gone. in my mind - throngs o f people m illing around on a dusty lot, w ait­ ing their turn to have their most basic health care needs met. W hile I w atched, a mixture of anger and disgust w elled up in me in a way I cannot fully express. The experience these people are living through is so pathetic and wrought with sham e that I hurt for them. W hat struck me m ost is these are A m ericans, our people, being sub­ jected to such a com plete disregard that it is utterly unfathomable. While billions o f dollars are pum ped into the M iddle East, little is being done to care for our own people. W hile billions o f dollars fill the pockets of the President’s friends on w hat I believe to be suspect contracts, my so n ’s education suffers. It is no longer the dirt poor people who feel the brunt of our President’s foolishness - it is all o f us w ho choose to look. I am a m iddle-class, college educated business ow ner and I am disgusted beyond belief. I can afford health care and could rem ove my son from public school, if I so chose. But th at’s not really the point. The President budget proposal is not only a slap in the face to A m ericans, is not only laughable in it’s care and concern for all o f us - rich, poor and in between, it is the derailing o f the Am erica that as a child I thought o f as great, ju st and true. There is nothing great, true or ju st about a country that allow s its children to ge, lost in the poorly funded public school system or its elderly to suffer because they can ­ not afford their m edication or it’s citizens to stand in the hot, dusty heat, sham ed and defeated as they w ait to get the care o f a doctor. That is not my America, Mr. President. Nicole Maust Northeast Portland