| A Personal Relationship with Dr. King |
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| Written by Reginald Simeon | |
| Sunday, 14 January 2007 | |
![]() Photo source: kindernetz.de Indeed, the "letter from
Martin Luther King was a preacher, a true man of God, one who bluntly hrefused to be a passive bystander to the erosion of divine values instilled in every man. Although King's approach is mostly vehicled by a natural law perspective, his analysis of the social problems includes key elements of the divine law. In fact, he believed that God created man with certain inalienable rights such as the right to life, to be free, and the pursuit of happiness. To prevent man from enjoying these rights is against divine precepts. While King was seduced by the principles of civil disobedience and non-violence, his religious principles were always at the forefront of his political philosophy. King also believed in the fundamental goodness of man, on his inclination toward good. He says that every human life is a hreflex of divinity and every act of injustice mars and defaces the image of God in man. For that, he sought to bring man closer to his Godly image by transcending racial, religious, and political barriers. At the end, man would be equal, under the law as he is under God. Like Jean Jacques Rousseau, King believed: "Man is born good and pure, but society corrupts him."
Like Gandhi, he advocated civil disobedience and non-violence to
fight injustice and arrive at a new social contract. He saw that the
black minority was not part of the American social contract because
they were not allowed to participate in its elaboration. Having been
brought from
King grew up in the old south, more precisely in
Martin Luther King willingly deprived himself of the security of a material life to adopt that of a nomad. Going from place to place, ringing the bells of freedom, singing the songs of brotherhood, and calling for the coming together of people of all religion, color, race, and ethnicity. He wanted to depose the first brick in the building of a new American society; a society in which people would not be judged by race, color, and religion, but by their contribution to the common good.
"I have a dream this day! I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character." How can my relationship with Dr. King not become the more personal, when I, a father, am reading the "letter from Birmingham jail", and in the back of my mind, the voice of that little girl (like my little girl Regianie) asking her daddy why she could not go to the park, as if the question was addressed to me, as if she were my own. How can my relationship with Dr. King not grow even deeper when I look in my past, and find myself engaging in exactly the same kind of nonviolent protest advocated by him? In fact, I am not only an admirer of Dr. King’s writings, but also a student of his teachings. Having migrated to the U.S. from a country (Haiti) racked by political and social turbulence; a country where only less than 5% of the population controls the scarce national resources, where food and schools are privileges afforded to the very lucky, where human rights and respect for human life are ideals without much following, I am able to understand the new social contract he advocates. Furthermore, my relationship with Dr. King became the more imposing when I realized that the new social contract he was advocating did not confine itself to the four corners of America, but embraced the cause of man kind wherever he was oppressed. Indeed, King never negotiated the power of his words or the comfort of his presence wherever they could have made a difference. His call for human rights and social justice was of universal proportion, and his speeches best illustrate this when he says:
"The denial of human rights anywhere is a threat to the affirmation of human rights everywhere." In fact, Dr. King's struggle for human rights also embraced the
politically oppressed living in foreign nations. He clearly understood
that the struggle for freedom of the black man in
“I have a dream that one day, sons of former slave and sons of former slave owners will sit together at the table of brotherhood." The table of brotherhood he talks about is the starting point of the new social contract. Because of his refusal to fight discrimination with more discrimination, Dr. King was particularly adamant when it came to taking a stand against those of his race for expressing some views, which seemed discriminatory or anti-Semitic. His remarks to comments made by other black leaders such as Malcolm X (a member of the Nation of Islam) were clear and unequivocal.
"We cannot substitute one tyranny for another, and for the black man to be struggling for justice and then turn around and be anti-Semitic is not only a very irrational course, but it is a very immoral course." At the end, we all have a personal relationship with Martin Luther king in some way, whether we recognize it or not, for what he lived and died for was to make this a better world for all of us, irrespective of race, color, religion, or social status. He taught us in tangible ways that non-violent protest is the only way to open the doors to a constructive dialogue, and from that dialogue would ensue reconciliation with our adversaries. “We may not simply sit and allow ourselves to become the passive bystander o f the killing and murdering of our people. Repeatedly, we must reaffirm our right to be free” as Dr. King so eloquently puts it in his letter from |
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