Wednesday, April 24, 2024
39.0°F

MLK - 50 years later

by Jesse Washington
| October 13, 2014 9:00 PM

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. dedicated his life to much more than achieving racial equality. That goal, he said again and again, was inseparable from alleviating poverty and stopping war. And he reiterated this theme after being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 50 years ago this week.

"I refuse to accept the view that mankind is so tragically bound to the starless midnight of racism and war, that the bright daybreak of peace and brotherhood can never become a reality," he said in his Nobel acceptance speech.

"Sooner or later, all the people of the world will have to discover a way to live together in peace."

Half a century later, it's obvious that enormous progress has been made toward overcoming racial discrimination - that King was right in his vision about race. Yet widespread poverty remains, in America and beyond, and bombs still fall as brutal wars rage on.

Was King naive? Was his full vision simply unobtainable - do free markets require poor people to function, and will war always assert itself as a defining human habit?

Is King's Nobel vision relevant five decades later?

Absolutely, insist some who study King's life and philosophy. They say his racial proclamations and strategies, so controversial back then but now part of the American cultural canon, can and should apply to today's stubborn issues of poverty and war.

"I don't think his vision has ever been more relevant," says Paul Chappell, a West Point graduate who served in Iraq and now teaches and writes books about peace. "The problem is, people don't realize how prophetic King was."

Chappell, the Peace Leadership Director for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, which seeks a world without nuclear weapons, says a close examination of King's life and work shows he predicted today's protests over income inequality and trillions of war dollars drained from America's budgets.

"He realized that American military intervention is not only harmful to people around the world, it's also harmful to the American people," Chappell says.

The peace prize for King, then just 35 years old, honored a Southern preacher whose philosophy, courage and oratory galvanized the civil rights movement, on whose behalf he said he accepted it. It gave a unique international recognition to the movement's accomplishments at a pivotal time.

The prize was announced on Oct. 14, 1964, against a backdrop of the Civil Rights Act, whose passage earlier that year finally granted black Americans full citizenship. But it also came as the nation approached all-out war in Vietnam. King accepted the award in Oslo, Norway, on Dec. 10, and the following day delivered the traditional Nobel lecture.

In his remarks, King returned to a lifelong theme of describing a world where love and compassion could conquer poverty and conflict. His strategies were based on nonviolence - "the need for man to overcome oppression and violence without resorting to violence and oppression," as he said in his speech.

"The foundation of such a method is love," he said.

"The Nobel speeches really are neglected gems of how long-term progress against these evils requires a great commitment of mind and spirit and cooperation all rolled into one," says the historian Taylor Branch, author of the definitive trilogy "America in the King Years."

I don't think he's nave, Branch says. I think he's saying, if there's hope, it's through nonviolent cooperation and really applying it with courage and all your heart and your mind against the evils that still plague the world.

Branch says that even though dozens of countries are at war today, levels of global violence and large-scale casualties have been declining since the mid-20th century. By that measure, there has been progress toward King's dream of peace.

King used his Nobel lecture to expand on the connections between racism, poverty and war.

"Each of these problems, while appearing to be separate and isolated, is inextricably bound to the other," he said.

Using nonviolence to achieve racial progress, King said, meant people "have taken suffering upon themselves instead of inflicting it on others . It has meant that we do not want to instill fear in others or into the society of which we are a part."

That society is far bigger than America, King stated. It is the human family.

"We have inherited a big house, a great 'world house' in which in which we have to live together - black and white, Easterners and Westerners, Gentiles and Jews, Catholics and Protestants, Moslem and Hindu, a family unduly separated in ideas, culture, and interests who, because we can never again live without each other, must learn, somehow, in this one big world, to live with each other," King lectured.

"This call for a worldwide fellowship that lifts neighborly concern beyond one's tribe, race, class, and nation is in reality a call for an all-embracing and unconditional love for all men."

Some say love has nothing to do with it. "War is embedded in our very nature," the influential scholar Edward O. Wilson wrote in his book "The Social Conquest of Earth," which argues that humans have developed, biologically, a tendency to fight. Others argue that some income inequality is inevitable, since people have different capabilities.

Yet there is the question of degree. Clayborne Carson, a history professor and director of Stanford University's Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute, says King had focused on the triple threat of racism, poverty and war since the earliest parts of his career.

"You couldn't solve one without solving the others," Carson says in describing King's view.

In that context, today's struggle against enduring poverty and war may reflect a resistance to King's holistic approach: We followed King's lead to push back racism, but haven't yet tried to apply his methods of love and shared suffering to poverty and war.

"If the distribution of wealth in America was less unequal, we wouldn't see as many of these manifestations of racial conflict," Carson says.

The gap between the richest and poorest Americans has grown over the last 40 years, according to a February 2014 report by the liberal Economic Policy Institute. And the poverty rate, 15 percent in 2012, the most recent year available, hasn't improved much since 1964, when it stood at 19 percent.