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NEWS & LETTERS, January-February 2002

Column: Black-Red View by John Alan

Martin Luther King's philosophic legacy

Martin Luther King Jr. is the only African American that this nation as a whole formally recognizes with a national holiday. All other great African Americans who have fought valiantly for freedom, such as Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth, are not formally remembered. Rev. King was indeed a great leader during the mass struggles against segregation, racism, poverty and the Vietnam war. He understood the reasons for those struggles and universalized them as struggles of humanity against oppression.

While racism and poverty are still ingrained in American civilization, it does not mean that the Civil Rights Movement was a failure. By liberating African Americans from the social conditions imposed upon them by segregation, the Civil Rights Movement shook up the rulers of this nation and forced them to enact new laws such as the Voting Rights Act of 1965, the Fair Housing Act of 1968 and government programs against poverty.

BEGINNINGS IN BUS BOYCOTT

Since 1881 Southern African Americans had been segregated in public transportation. Some resisted and were severely beaten. "Enough is enough" said Mrs. Rosa Parks on Dec. 1, 1955, when she boarded a bus in Montgomery, Ala. to go home after a hard day's labor and discovered that the segregated back of the bus was filled with passengers and took a seat in the so-called neutral zone between the races. She didn't violate the segregation law until an arrogant white man boarded the bus and, finding no vacant seat in the white section, ordered Mrs. Parks to give her seat to him. She refused to comply with this rude demand and was arrested.

The 27-year-old Rev. King had been living in Montgomery for a year. The bus boycott was not his idea, but rather it was an idea whose time had come. According to Charles Denby, in his autobiography, INDIGNANT HEART: A BLACK WORKERS' JOURNAL, Rev. King told him that "he knew nothing about the boycott until church members began asking their pastors what they should do, and practically everyone of the pastors said stay off the bus."

Although Rev. King was not among the initial organizers of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, he did bring to the boycott Mahatma Gandhi's philosophic concept of "nonviolent direct action." He maintained that Mahatma Gandhi had practiced it in India and won the battle against the mighty military forces of the British empire.

When one examines the concept of "nonviolent direct action," it becomes quite clear that "non-violent" is not the transforming element. It is the "direct action" of the masses, the self bringing forth of freedom, that changes things.

CHURCH OF RESISTANCE

Rev. King did not need to turn to Gandhi in order to find a philosophy for African-American liberation. A direct action philosophy did exist in the theology of his own Protestant religion, and he was aware of it. After he graduated from Morehouse College, King enrolled at Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania. There he encountered the social theology of Walter Rauschenbusch and Reinhold Niebuhr's justification for use of coercion to combat social evils.

Rauschenbusch was the most radical of the social gospel theologians and a member of the Second German Baptist Church in New York City. He saw wide-spread poverty and disease among the poor daily, and this caused him to think about the social significance of the gospel. His critique of capitalism, in his book, Christianity and the Social Crisis (1907) brought him national fame. Reinhold Niebuhr argued that Christians had to engage in politics and resist evil with force. This type of social gospel was part of the very nature of the African-American church which produced leaders in the opposition to slavery like Nat Turner and Denmark Vesey.

By 1967 the Civil Rights Movement was over. A new stage of social solidarity was glimpsed in the urban revolts in Detroit that year, where looting in some areas was integrated — a foreshadowing of Los Angeles' revolt of 1992. However, King didn't leave the battlefield. He attempted to revive the movement by engaging in a campaign against poverty. After his failed movement to end the slums in Chicago, he began organizing a Poor People's March on Washington. Finally, King went to Memphis to support the striking garbage workers where he was assassinated.

We can learn from King's philosophy of humanism as social solidarity as well as his sense of being the voice of a mass movement. That striving for social solidarity needs to be met with a full philosophy of liberation to catch its permanent, fluid and ongoing character. It may be nonviolent marches in the South one day and urban rebellions against oppressive police the next.

All through his life, King was never at peace with racism, poverty, war, and the exploitation of labor. He ceaselessly opposed those forms of human alienation and denigration because they treated people as if they were things.

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