Many people working for justice today stand on
the shoulders of Martin Luther King Jr., but I believe King's
vision of justice is often gravely limited and misunderstood.
Too many people thought then, and continue to think, that King's
statements regarding justice were only about race and the African-American
community. We fail to see how King's vision of inclusion and
community is far wider that we might once have imagined.
For King, justice was more than a racial issue,
more than a legal or moral issue. Justice was a human issue.
And this was evident in King's concern about a wide range of
issues: "The revolution for human rights is opening up
unhealthy areas in American life and permitting a new and wholesome
healing to take place," King once told a racially mixed
audience. "Eventually, the civil rights movement will have
contributed infinitely more to the nation than the eradication
of racial injustice."
Moral leadership played a profound role in the
justice work that King did. He argued that true moral leadership
must involve itself in the situations of all who are damned,
disinherited, disrespected and dispossessed, and moral leadership
must be part of a participatory government that is feverishly
working to dismantle the existing discriminatory laws that truncate
full participation in the fight to advance democracy. And surely
part of our job, in keeping King's dream alive, is also to work
to dismantle discriminatory laws and dehumanizing structures.
But
if King were among us today, he would say that it is not enough
just to look outside ourselves to see the places where society
is broken. It is not enough to talk about institutions and workplaces
that fracture and separate people based on race, religion, gender
and sexual orientation. We must also look at the ways that we
ourselves manifest these bigotries, how we are the very ones
who uphold and are part of these institutions and workplaces.
Often, we find that these institutions and workplaces
are broken, dysfunctional and wounded in the very same ways
that we are. The structures we have created are mirrors not
of who we want to be, but of who we really are.
King would remind each of us that we cannot
heal the world if we have not healed ourselves. So perhaps the
greatest task, and the most difficult work we must do in light
of King's teachings, is to heal ourselves. And this work must
be done in relationship with our justice work in the world.
In
"The Old Man and the Sea," Ernest Hemingway said that
the world breaks us all, but some of us grow strong in those
broken places. King's teachings invite us to grow strong in
our broken places, not only to mend the sin-sick world in which
we live, but also to mend the sin-sick world we carry around
within us. And we can only do that if we are willing to look
both inward and outward, healing ourselves of the bigotry, biases
and the demons that chip away at our efforts to work toward
justice in this world. Our differences have been used to divide
us instead of uniting us, so consequently, we reside in a society
were human brokenness, human isolation and human betrayal are
played out every day.
I know that the struggle against racism that
King talked about is only legitimate if I am also fighting anti-Semitism,
homophobia, sexism, classism, not only out in the world but
also in myself. Otherwise, I am creating an ongoing cycle of
abuse that goes on unexamined and unaccounted for.
We are foolish if we think we can heal the world
and not ourselves. And we delude ourselves if we think that
King was only talking about the woundedness of institutional
racism, and not the personal wounds we all carry as human beings.
Ironically, our culture of woundedness and victimization
has bonded us together in brokenness. The sharing of worlds
to depict and honor our pain has created a new language of intimacy,
a bonding ritual that allows us to talk across and among our
pains. In exploring our common wounds, we sometimes feel more
able to find the trust and the understanding that eludes us
as "healthy" people.
When we bond in these unhealthy ways we miss
opportunities in ourselves for moral leadership, and to work
collaboratively with others to effect change in seemingly small
ways that eventually lead to big outcomes.
Both Rosa Parks and Martin Luther
King Jr. were leaders in the Montgomery bus boycott in challenging
Alabama's Jim Crow laws. Both were working together for a desired
outcome, and they could not have done it without the other.
Had Rosa Parks not sat down, refusing her seat to a white man,
that day on the bus in December 1955, King could not have gotten
up to promulgate a social gospel, which catapulted the civil
rights movement.
Each year, I mark the Martin Luther King holiday
by re-examining myself in light of King's teachings, and in
so doing, I try to uncover not only the ways in which the world
breaks me, but also how it breaks other people. I contemplate
that which keeps us fractured instead of united toward a common
goal - a multicultural democracy.
I believe that when we use our gifts in the
service of others, as King has taught us, we then shift the
paradigm of personal brokenness to personal healing. We also
shift the paradigm of looking for moral leadership from outside
ourselves to within ourselves, thus realizing we are not only
the agents of change in society, but also the moral leader for
whom we have been looking.
Our job, therefore, in keeping King's dream
alive, is to remember that our longing for social justice is
also inextricably tied to our longing for personal healing.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe is
a religion columnist, theologian, and public speaker. A native
of Brooklyn, Rev. Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College
and Union Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and served
as a pastor at an African-American church before coming to Harvard
Divinity School for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow. Reverend
Monroe’s “Let
Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow 365 Days a Year - Meditations
on Bible Prayers" will be out in June, 2008. As an African American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society that
is frequently invisible. Her website is irenemonroe.com. Click
here to contact the Rev. Monroe.