A
Vision For All; King's battle against injustice
knew no barriers
Editorial,
Detroit Free Press
1/16/06
Remembering Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is not
a black or white issue.
King was bigger than the racial walls he attempted
to tear down. Remembering that may be the best
way to honor his legacy on what would have been
his 77th birthday.
King's commitment to bettering the whole of America
is evident in the many speeches that will not
be replayed again and again today, their relevance
drowned out by the great oratory in his 1963 "I
Have a Dream" speech.
The battle for racial equality and tolerance does
rage on, but King had much to teach America about
economic equality and fair employment treatment
as well.
One can be sure that, if he were alive, King would
be calling for an end to
urban violence. He would want an explanation and
a solution for the 37 million Americans, including
13 million children, who live below the poverty
line. He would demand assistance for the estimated
45 million Americans who live without health insurance.
King would have been studying the issues and challenging
lawmakers and society to act long before these
problems became crises.
In his "Letter from a Birmingham Jail,"
King wrote of his effort to rally
white jail guards. His famous sermon, "The
Drum Major Instinct," urged people to fight
against racism, economic exploitation and militarism
as interrelated "triple evils." King
called for a Bill of Rights of the Disadvantaged,
and entreated Congress to turn the minimum wage
into something that would actually earn a living.
"We
know of no more crucial civil rights issue facing
Congress today than the need to increase the federal
minimum wage and extend its coverage," he
said in 1966. "A living wage should be the
right of all Americans."
Forty years later, America still waits for that
dream, and a government
committed enough to carry out the broad vision
of equality for which Dr. King so bravely fought
and so tragically died.
Copyright 2006 Detroit Free Press
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