Martin Luther King’s call beyond ‘I have a dream’

Here, comfortable in my condo reading “I Have a Dream,” I feel good. I can celebrate Martin Luther King Day as though it’s a piece of packaged history—complete, ribbon and bow. And I can move on, ennobled, righteously confident that the day against racism and its tangential injustices has been won. (The incidental fact of my Canadian-ness with its supposed inherent innocence regarding racism, providing me even more distance, more cushion.)

hqdefaultDelivered in 1963 at the Lincoln Memorial, “I Have a Dream” has become our singular remembrance of MLK. It was, of course, a watershed speech, magnificent, courageous, an axis mundi moment in the civil rights movement. But as inspiring and momentous as that speech was, King was still evolving, still in pursuit of exposing something more encompassing. Something that lies at the root of human division and structures of power.

A year to the day before King was assassinated, he delivered a speech at the Riverside Church in New York, that the Pentagon and the entire military establishment of the United States are still trying to squelch through distraction, through re-envisioning history and through the distortion of his legacy.

Last year at this time, for example, the United States Air Force’s Global Strike Command posted an online essay saying that Dr. King would cheer on soldiers “ensuring the most powerful weapons in the U.S. arsenal remain the credible bedrock of our national defense. Maintaining our commitment to our Global Strike team is a fitting tribute to Dr. King.”

As David Sirota further points outs,

The U.S. Marines commemorated Martin Luther King Day by tweeting out a famous King line—“a man who won’t die for something is not fit to live”—in a not-so-subtle attempt to depict him as a war supporter. That was a follow-up to a 2011 article posted on the Defense Department’s website with the headline: “King Might Understand Today’s Wars, Pentagon Lawyer Says.

Princeton professor Cornel West labeled all this the “Santa Clausification” of Dr. King. Well, we might want to ask why the obfuscation. Why for instance do we see copious replays of “I Have a Dream,” while “Beyond Vietnam” is suppressed?

Should you read the Riverside speech, the answer is obvious. Given the character of MLK, living at the time he did, his evolution from civil rights leader to international peace activist was inevitable.

According to Gar Alperovitz, a colleague of King’s, it was a Ramparts magazine report in early 1967 with photos of Vietnamese children who had been the victims of U.S. napalm bombing that pushed King over the edge about the war. While King had been critical of the war as early as 1965, it was this that compelled him to break the silence.

When MLK brought his nation’s war mongering into the field of his moral vision he found himself alienated both from some of the civil rights leaders who had always supported him, as well as, quite naturally, the Lyndon Johnson administration. The ongoing attacks of the Right only intensified. And the established media were complicit. Concerning the Riverside speech, the New York Times condemned it as simplistic and flawed. Time magazine called it “demagogic slander that sounded like a script for Radio Hanoi,” and the Washington Post declared that King had “diminished his usefulness to his cause, his country, his people.” I’m reminded of the reaction to Pope Francis’ Evangelii Gaudiume.

In “Beyond Vietnam” King calls for a revolution of values:

A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: “This is not just.”

Betrayal_MLK_ThereComesATime1As King watched black and white soldiers “in brutal solidarity burning the huts of a poor Vietnamese village,” realizing “they would never live on the same block in Detroit,” he could not but cry out in the face of such cruel manipulation of the poor.

They asked if our own nation wasn’t using massive doses of violence to solve its problems, to bring about the changes it wanted. Their questions hit home, and I knew that I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed in the ghettos without having first spoken clearly to the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today—my own government.

King clearly understood the larger implications, he saw into the heart of a system, into the seductive powers and principalities of colonialism, nationalism, North American jingoism:

There is something seductively tempting about stopping there and sending us all off on what in some circles has become a popular crusade against the war in Vietnam. I say we must enter the struggle, but I wish to go on now to say something even more disturbing. The war in Vietnam is but a symptom of a far deeper malady within the American spirit.

Reading the Riverside speech, “Beyond Vietnam,” it’s impossible to not notice how close the connections are to our own time. And our Canadian-ness does not give us immunity.

A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defence than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.

It’s also impossible not to see King’s own struggle, his calling to speak against his own government—his “vocation of agony.” And it’s impossible not to be moved. But now, will I allow this being-moved to affect my own comfort?

Martin Luther King Jr. concluded by hanging his hope on peaceful revolution and love:

Our only hope today lies in our ability to recapture the revolutionary spirit and go out into a sometimes hostile world declaring eternal hostility to poverty, racism, and militarism.

Love is somehow the key that unlocks the door which leads to ultimate reality. This Hindu-Moslem-Christian-Jewish-Buddhist belief about ultimate reality is beautifully summed up in the first epistle of Saint John: Let us love one another; for love is God and everyone that loveth is born of God and knoweth God…If we love one another God dwelleth in us, and his love is perfected in us.


6 Comments

  1. This speech makes MLK an early objector, before the universities’ student bodies began their activism. It is revisionist therefore to make him a military supporter. I think, though, that the hyperbole is unhelpful – the US as the “greatest purveyor of violence”? There have always been plenty of violence purveyors in the world methinks. The Viet Cong were no peaceniks. The prediction at the time that if South Vietnam fell, there would be a blood bath in the Indonesian peninsula came true in the killing fields of Cambodia.

    But I haven’t listened to the whole speech. Thanks for bringing this to our attention.

  2. Thanks Sam. No question, Americans are not alone as purveyors of violence. But considering the sheer weight of American militarism, fire-power, the fact that they have something like a 1000 military bases around the world, that they are currently at war in Afghanistan and Iraq, that there are ongoing drone attacks in a half dozen countries that kill many civilians, that they are by far the biggest supplier of arms to nations around the world and that at home, they have the highest number of guns per capita of any nations…I’m not sure if you can call it hyperbole.

    Here’s a recent list of wars (since 9-11) published a couple years ago by the Institute for Policy Studies:

    Official (though undeclared) wars in and against Afghanistan and Iraq
    Official (but not really a war “because U.S. troops aren’t the ones at risk”) war in Libya
    Unofficial (though sort of acknowledged) war in Pakistan
    Unacknowledged (because murder-by-drone doesn’t count as war) war in Yemen and Somalia
    Indirect and diplomatic war (through $30 billion military aid enabling Israel’s occupation and by promising another UN veto) against Palestine
    Unacknowledged and denied (through still-stealth drone campaigns) war in uncertain venues mainly in Africa, Asia and the Middle East
    Untitled (though still accurately described as the Global War on Terror) war in the whole world
    Then there’s the not-exactly-military war, like the war against the poor in the United States because of the hundreds of billions, now trillions, of tax dollars wasted on all those other wars.

    And here’s a recent article by Michael Shank, director of foreign policy at the Friends Committee on National Legislation, who thinks MLK’s remark is still accurate…but then he’s a Quaker.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-shank/march-on-washington-great_b_3797222.html

    Of course, even if it is hyperbole, it cuts to the bone and spurs reflection. That’s helpful I think. Then too, King was also a follower of someone who used hyperbole.

  3. Points well taken, Steve. Especially the last one about the hyperbole used by the One MLK followed. And that One became a Peacemaker by giving up his life.

    Your list of armed conflicts is of course a very short one, including only those in which the US is involved. You’re likely aware of the classification between those conflicts that take more than 1000 lives and those that take less.

    I would also suggest that the presence of many of the US’s military bases has prevented a lot of fighting and killing. Korea, Europe and other places are examples of this. Sometimes they do simply show the big stick and walk softly.

    Nevertheless, the longing for peace persists. What should governments that are charged with protecting their citizens do?

  4. Thanks Sam. The problem with carrying the big stick is that it invariably gets used, and too often beyond any kind of justified self-defense. There is little soft walking.

    I don’t entirely know what governments should do, I suppose I have a better idea of what shouldn’t be done. Nevertheless, even as a pacifist, I could support a government’s adoption of the “Just War” theory, with its limits of proportion, discrimination, last resort, right intention etc. as it would, if truly adopted, save the lives of civilians as well as preclude many wars. (I suppose that would make me a qualified pacifist.)

    At the same time, pacifism is not without practicality:
    http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=115

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