January 11, 2017 The Skanner Page 13 Honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The Speech: The Story behind Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Dream By Kam Williams Special to the NNPA from the Afro-American Newspaper “A great speech is both timely and timeless. First and foremost, it must touch and move its im- mediate audience… But it must also simultaneously reach over the heads of the assembled to posterity. The ‘I Have a Dream’ speech qualified on both counts. It was delivered in a year that started with Alabama Governor George Wallace, standing on the steps of the state capitol, declaring ‘Segre- gation now! Segregation tomorrow! Segregation forever!’ The speech starts, both literally and metaphor- “ We learn that ‘I Have a Dream’ was not the planned focus of the speech, in fact, ... was substantially impro- vised on the spot as an after- thought ically, in the shadow of Lincoln, ends with a quote from a Negro spiritual, and in between quotes the song ‘America the Beauti- ful’ while evoking ‘a dream rooted in the American dream’ and drawing ref- erences from the bible and Constitution… Fifty years later, the speech endures as a defin- ing moment in the Civil Rights Movement… This gripping book unearths the fascinating chronicle behind ‘The speech’ and the revealing events sur- rounding The March on Washington.” -- Excerpted from Introduction O wing agenda. For this reason, it is rather re- freshing to find an opus like this being published on the 50th anniversary to remind us of the true meaning of Dr. King’s moving remarks. The author of the book is Gary Younge, a Black roadcaster and colum- nist based in Chicago. Here, the British-born, award-winning journal- ist does a masterful job of not only dissecting Dr. King’s words, but of fill- ing in much of the back story to the events lead- ing up to his taking the podium. We learn that “I Have a Dream” was not the planned focus of the speech, in fact, that di- vinely-inspired, emo- n Aug. 28, 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. delivered his ‘I Have a Dream’ speech, an unapolo- getically poetic appeal for the elusive equal rights long denied Afri- can-Americans. Unfor- tunately, over the years, the late martyr’s historic address has all but been reduced to his wish that “my four children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged the color of their skin but by the content of their character.” A half-century later we find that “content of character” phrase being appropriated, quoted out of context and will- fully misrepresented by arch-conservatives from Glenn Beck to Herman Cain in service of a right- tional crescendo was substantially improvised on the spot as an after- thought. King’s intended theme merely revolved around an earnest ex- planation that blacks had descended on the District of Columbia “to cash a promissory note for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” For, while preparing his speech on the eve of the march, King had been advised by a colleague to cut out the lines about his having a dream. “It’s trite… It’s cliché,” Rever- end Wyatt Tee Walker warned. But, the next day on the National Mall, as Dr. King came close to finish- ing reading from his pre- pared text, gospel great Mahalia Jackson started prompting him to go off script. “Tell them about the dream, Martin!” she shouted repeatedly, re- ferring to a familiar refrain she’d heard her dear friend eloquently riff about in sermons several times before. Fortunately, Martin did indeed heed Mahalia, and began waxing romantic about his prophetic vi- sion. “Aw, sh*t, he’s using the dream,” Reverend Walker moaned. Yet, as Coretta Scott King would recall, “At that moment, it seemed as if the King- dom of God appeared.” And the rest, as they say, is history. Martin Luther King Jr. addresses a crowd from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial where he delivered his famous, “I Have a Dream,” speech during the Aug. 28, 1963, march on Washington, D.C.