Although Monday, November 13 was a dreary, gray day,
there were smiles and excitement as people lined up to enter the
groundbreaking for the Martin Luther King memorial on the Washington
Mall. Though the Secret Service cleared folks at a snail’s pace,
spirits and energy was high as people smiled and told each other
what a great day it was.
More than two centuries after slaves built the capitol,
an African American man and the legacy of the civil rights movement
will be featured in the national mall, along with memorials to Abraham
Lincoln, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington and Franklin Delano
Roosevelt. Along with monuments to Vietnam Veterans and World War
II veterans, the King memorial will be a tribute to veterans of
the civil rights movement who successfully agitated for a seismic
change in the way our nation was organized.
The Revs. Jesse Jackson and Andrew Young shared an
emotional moment at the groundbreaking of the King memorial in Washington
on Monday. Ambassador Young, caught up in the moment, with his
voice breaking, laid his head on Rev. Jackson’s chest, as he exhorted,
turn the dirt, turn the dirt, and turn the dirt.
It was a moving moment, an occasion for tears and
temperance. It was a phenomenal moment of pain and power, a reminder
of the “long arc of history” that Dr. King spoke of so frequently.
Moving. Painful. Powerful. Profound. Celebration. Imagination.
All of that and more.
Maya Angelou was poignantly on point. Oprah Winfrey
was better than I’d ever heard her, placing herself in historical
context. She described herself as the blossom of the seed that
was planted with King’s work. Such an apt description, such moving
words, such a phenomenal connection between her life as a high school
child and an assembly that she attended in high school, when, unprepared
for an algebra test, Jesse Jackson preached that excellence was
the antidote to racism.
William Jefferson Clinton, the president black folk
love to love, preached. George W. Bush, the president black folk
love to hate, pontificated. Kirk Franklin, the gospel singer black
folks love to sway to swayed along with Bubba (also known as Bill
Clinton) and smiled. A good time was had by all, good vibes and
good feelings.
But for all of the use of Dr. King’s quotes, I kept
wondering if anybody really got it. Got the issue of economic justice,
that is, in a way that is transformative. For all of the good vibes
this event was, more than anything else, a corporate event, chock
full of sponsorships, with those sponsorship dollars wagging the
tail of the event. Rev. Jackson did not have a prominent speaking
role, and others who might have legitimately claimed a place on
the program were absent, such as the Rev. Joseph Lowery. What does
it mean when Dr. King’s chief lieutenants were prominent on stage
but missing in action?
What does it mean when the nation’s top ranking African
American official, Dr. Condoleezza Rice, came and went, occupying
center stage for as long as her boss, Mr. Bush, spoke, but scurrying
away when he left. Wasn’t her connection to the movement strong
enough to warrant more than a cameo appearance? Some Republicans
remained on stage throughout. Jack Kemp, actually, has done a
great job as part of the MLK committee. The former Oklahoma Congressman
JC Watts, and the unsuccessful Maryland Senatorial candidate Michael
Steele were also on stage with the other hundred or so “who’s who”.
Steele was mentioned, for about a moment, as a possible head of
the Republican National Committee. After his crippled dream of
snatching a Republican Senate seat in Maryland bit the dust, I suppose
he ought to be grateful to be considered for anything. Certainly,
the Republican establishment that encouraged him to jump in the
Maryland race is likely to “take care” of him with a new, visible
position. Since Dr. King belonged to all of America, I’m glad that
Rice, Steele and Watts were there. Further, I’m inspired by the
impassioned plea that Jack Kemp put out for DC statehood, making
a more forceful statement on that subject than many African American
elected officials have.
Someone told me that if I wrote about this event,
I should do so with the same love for the “beloved community” that
Dr. King wished for all of us. I wish I could. But an unfortunate
aspect of the groundbreaking is the fact that some of us have already
lost the dream. Dr. King was about economic justice, but the wealth
gap is growing, not shrinking, in this country. Dr. King called
for a restructuring of our nation’s economic system, but for the
past decade we have had “business as usual” economics, with tax
cuts benefiting corporations and the wealthy. Poverty was our nation’s
ugly little secret until Hurricane Katrina hit, and even now Katrina
survivors have not gotten the relief they deserve.
Erecting a memorial for Dr. King is an important step,
but it is only a first step. What really must happen is that we
have to restructure the economy along the lines that Dr. King has
suggested. Our nation needs to be more committed to the goal of
social and economic justice. The Democrats are likely to raise
the minimum wage when they take power in January, but after a decade
of stagnant wages they must offer more relief than that to the poor.
Ambassador Andrew Young asked the dozens who had shovels
to “turn the dirt” at the groundbreaking. In turning the dirt,
will we ever turn the tide; turn our economy toward one that is
organized in a more just manner? Hopefully a memorial to Dr. King
is a motivator and a catalyst, the turning of dirt more than a symbolic
gesture to the past, but a step toward creating a future for those
who Dr. King had the audacity to believe in.
BC Editorial Board member, Dr. Julianne Malveaux,
PhD, is an economist, author, and national commentator, President
of The FuturePAC, and Secretary-Treasurer of the Board of the Economic
Policy Institute. Click
here to contact Dr. Malveaux. |