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Honoring Rev Martin Luther King Jr Day in 2024

Rev Martin Luther King Jr Museum in Atlanta - On the Mountain Top, Sep 2023

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Monday, January 15, 2024 is Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Tributes to civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.  were held in the Unites States, nationwide. This is the second year people interactions were allowed after a break  in 2021 and 2022 hit by worldwide COVID-19 pandemic.  As usual, the day has been marked by  commemorations including events,  marches, speeches, and peaceful protests to remember and celebrate the national civil rights leader who was instrumental in challenging the racial caste system that delineated how millions of Americans lived their lives and promoted racial injustices targeting minorities, especially Blacks.  The day also comes as the World is going through  racial,  ethnic,  or religion related wars, insecurity, and human tragedies especially in the Middle East, the Great Lakes Region of Africa, West and  East Africa, Eastern Europe, and South America. 

 Martin Luther King Jr. Day is  an annual federal holiday since 1986. All 50 states celebrate the public holiday on the third Monday in January, but not all states, cities and towns dedicate it solely to Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 

To honor Martin Luther King Jr. Day on January 15, 2024, President Joe Biden traveled to Pennsylvania to volunteer with Philabundance in honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

Vice President Kamala Harris visited South Carolina. In her address to the crowd at the Dome rally at the South Carolina Statehouse, in Columbia, VP Kamala Harris said: "We celebrate the legacy of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.  A visionary, who saw what could be unburdened by what had been. An organizer who moved the minds, the hearts, and the feet of the American people.” Addressing the issues threatening the freedom that Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was fighting for in the 1960s, she added: 

Freedom is fundamental to the promise of America. Freedom is not to be given. It is not to be bestowed. It is ours by right. And in many ways, the story of America has been a story of our fight, to realize that promise, as Dr. King wrote in the letter from Birmingham jail.

Rev Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Stand Up for that which is Right"

Commemorations continue to highlight that the life and times of  Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. cannot be summarized in an article, not even in books or tomes.  

What is sure is that Rev. Dr.  Martin Luther’s legacy focused on social justice, economic mobility, and  civil rights in general. Hence, recent commemorations have focused on the treatment of minorities by law enforcement  and corporations with persistent calls for the police reform, racial justice, fairness, economic disparities, equality,  and equitability.

One of the most memorable moments of the  life of the most renown Civil Rights Activist icon is the March  on Washington in 1963. During the march,  while addressing a crowd of more than 250,000 people  in front of the Lincoln Memorial,  Rev. Dr.  Martin Luther Jr. delivered his famous “I Have a Dream” speech.   His life was cut short on April 4, 1968,  when he was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. He was only 39 years old.

This year, like years before,  commemorations  have continue to call for fairness,  social  justice, economic fairness, police reform, racial justice,  and most importantly the fair electoral process. They also seemed to be fueled by the upcoming elections in which the key issues targeting the Blacks people will be at the center of debates and campaigns. 

In fact, as Rev. Marting Luther King Jr.. said: "A man dies when he refuses to stand up for that which is right. A man dies when he refuses to stand up for justice. A man dies when he refuses to take a stand for that which is true." 

However,  over and over again, the commemorations  and the events to celebrate his life and achievements are both a testimony on how far America has come, thanks to Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and all the Civil Rights movement leaders and activists, and the momentous task still ahead. The days over the most recent years, like in Dobie Gray's Drift Away song,  have been looking as drifting away but there is still hope, to carry  people through, to free their mind and soul, to give them joy, and to make them strong.

And, as Sam Cooke said in his song "A Change is Gonna Come", the change Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr dreamed about,  years ago, in 1963, is on a long term progress. 

New Advances, but Yet More Barriers: Voting Rights and Economic Disparities In the Focus. 

Many advances have been made in the last years, including the election and the reelection of Reverend Raphael Warnock,  becoming Georgia's first-ever Black US senator and also the first Black Democratic US senator from a southern state  (see US 2022 Election: In Georgia Runoff, Rev. Raphael Warnock Did It Again; What is Next?). His  victory helped the Democrats to regain control of the US Senate both in 2021 - 2022  and 2023. 

Afterwards, many more advances were made.

 In late 2021, the world watched as three white men were convicted in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, a Black man (See here Brunswick - Georgia - USA: Ahmaud Arbery Was Murdered for "Jogging While Black" According to Conviction).

On Friday, January 13, 2024,  after years of waiting, Federal prosecutors decided to seek the death penalty against a white supremacist who killed 10 Black people, including elderlies,  in a mass shooting at a Buffalo supermarket.   After he pleaded guilty to state charges of murder and hate-motivated domestic terrorism in the  May 14, 2022 attack, the white supremacist young man  has  already been serving a sentence of life in prison with no chance of parole.  On May 14, 2022 ,  after identifying a  business located  in a predominantly Black neighborhood,   the gunman, wearing a tactical helmet drove 200 miles from his home in rural Conklin, New York  and  attacked shoppers and workers with a semi-automatic rifle at the supermarket. He livestreamed the massacre using a camera attached to the tactical helmet.

Meanwhile, there are  major thorny issues in the United States of America that has been aggravated since 2021. Three major issues have been at the top:

  • challenge to Voting Rights;  
  • dismantling of race-based affirmative action, diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts;  and
  • ban on teaching Critical Race Theory in schools;
  • ignoring or minimizing wars, human tragedies, and crimes  targeting Blacks and the people of colors around the world.

 In his final book  “Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community,” published in 1967, Martin Luther  King Jr. highlighted the need for affirmative actions and teaching history,   writing that, “a society that has done something special against the Negro for hundreds of years must now do something special for the Negro.”

 US President Joe Biden, in a speech in Georgia, US, on January 11, 2022 called "Voting Rights" efforts the  "battle for the soul of America," comparing it to the fight against segregation by  Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.


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Since the 2020 elections, legislators in nineteen states have passed and enacted bills designed to restrict voting rights, targeting minorities. Since then, Democrats in Congress have drafted two bills to protect franchise rights.

On Monday, January 16, 2023, President Biden, during the keynote speech at the National Action Network’s (NAN) annual breakfast to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day, highlighted a major step forward, saying that  the Democrats and Republicans  were working together on the Electoral Count Reform Act and urged the US Congress to pass the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act and further protect “the sacred right to vote.”

Two voting bills have been  in play for while.

The  first bill is  the  Voting Rights Act of 2019 initiated by civil rights hero John Lewis, and renamed John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement (JLVRA) Act after his death (See here: Atlanta, Georgia: US and the World Say Goodbye to Civil Rights Icon John R. Lewis.).  The  bill was introduced in the Senate by  Patrick Leahey (D-VT) and  co-sponsored by forty-seven Democrats and Lisa Murkowski (R-AK).

The second bill, the Freedom to Vote Act, is a slimmed-down version of the "For the People Act" . Both bills have been approved by the House but the filibuster provision has made bringing either to a vote in the Senate impossible.  Hence, a major huddle is on the path to the Voting Rights.

The  Congress is highly divided as it is  heading into a presidential election.  House Democrats, led by Democratic Rep. Terri Sewell of Alabama,  plan to reintroduce the bill that would reaffirm and expand the Voting Rights Act of 1965,  after the U.S. Supreme Court dismantled key parts of the  law, and hence blocked the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act.

The Voting Rights challenges remind of the times of the Civil Rights movement.  In fact, during these times, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s sermons at Ebenezer provided insights into  racial and social problems of the day, that are still being faced even today. In one sermon,  on the Fourth of July in 1965, a month before the Voting Rights Act was enacted, Rev Martin Luther King  preached:

Now ever since the founding fathers of our nation dreamed this dream in all of its magnificence—to use a big word that the psychiatrists use—America has been something of a schizophrenic personality, tragically divided against herself . On the one hand we have proudly professed the great principles of democracy, but on the other hand we have sadly practiced the very opposite of those principles. But now more than ever before, America is challenged to realize its dream, for the shape of the world today does not permit our nation the luxury of an anemic democracy. And the price that America must pay for the continued oppression of the Negro and other minority groups is the price of its own destruction.”

President Joe Biden also insisted on pushing for addressing  economic disparities and closing the racial wealth gap  by building Black generational wealth, funding for historically Black colleges and universities, and combating discrimination in housing.'

Critical race theory or CRT, is the perspective  that any analysis of American society must take into account the history of racism and how race has shaped attitudes, institutions, justice, corporations and others.  Political leaders in some states have been   unwilling to acknowledge the  racist history in the US and how it impacts the present, and hence have enacted actions and a legislations to ban the teaching of CRT.  The legislations  mostly ban  discussions, trainings, and/or orientations that the  U.S. history has been is inherently racist and influencing current times.  They also forbid any discussions about conscious and unconscious racial bias, privileges, discrimination, and oppression. 

So far, nine states have passed legislations banning the teaching of Critical Race Theory. The states (Idaho, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Arizona, and North Dakota) are still facing resistance by human and civil rights activists.  In  November 2023 the Arizona Supreme Court  overturned the legislation.

In Florida, Georgia, Utah, and Alabama, the state school boards  have  introduced new guidelines barring CRT-related discussions widely or in some classrooms. Also,  local school boards in Kentucky, North Carolina,  and Virginia have openly targeted  CRT and promised to push for banning.

Never Giving Hope as  We Shall Overcome

Martin Luther King, Jr., used  "we shall overcome.”  call  in his final sermon in Memphis in 1968, just before his assassination. The words echoed several days later in the singing of the 50,000 people at his funeral.

Peter Seeger composed the song "We Shall Overcome," that became the hymn of civil rights activists across the US and the World. In the song the following words highlight the struggle in Rev Martin Luther King Jr's  time and even now:

 "This is the reason that I want to fight,
Not 'cause everything's perfect, or everything's right.
No, it's just the opposite: I'm fightin' because
I want a better America, and better laws,
And better homes, and jobs, and schools,
And no more Jim Crow, and no more rules like
"You can't ride on this train 'cause you're a Negro,"
"You can't live here 'cause you're a Jew,"
"You can't work here 'cause you're a union man."

©2024 AfroAmerica Network.