CNN’s Black In America series looks at assassination; also King’s radical push for new America

Categories: African-American, Media, Politics and Elections, Religion and Faith
Written By: Shawn Williams

Most of us realize, as his grave site would attest, that Dr. Martin Luther King died 40 years ago at the hands of an assassin’s bullet.  Yet a review of historical accounts may lead one to believe that Dr. King died in 1963.

Rare do we see much about the life Dr. King lead between the March on Washington and his work on the sanitation strike in Memphis.  Even less do we hear about his planned Poor Peoples’ Campaign and his opposition to the Vietnam War.

John Blake writes an article for CNN.com titled King’s final crusade: The radical push for a new America.   Here are some thoughts from Blake’s article:

  • Most Americans think of King as the “I Have a Dream” preacher at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. But the man who made his final trip to Memphis, Tennessee, in 1968 had become radical, scholars and activists say. King was gambling his legacy on a final crusade that was so revolutionary, it alarmed many of his closest advisers.
  • King called his crusade the Poor People’s Campaign. He planned to march on Washington with a multiracial army of poor people who would build shantytowns at the Lincoln Memorial — and paralyze the nation’s capital if they had to.
  • “It didn’t cost the nation one penny to integrate lunch counters … but now we are dealing with issues that cannot be solved without the nation spending billions of dollars and undergoing a radical redistribution of economic power,” King said during a trip to Mississippi in February 1968.
  • King had also lost the ear of his most important ally, President Lyndon Johnson. On April 4, 1967, exactly a year before he was assassinated, King delivered a highly publicized speech against the Vietnam War.

    “Johnson was outraged,” Wilkins said. “He turned sour toward King and the movement. He felt that Martin had rejected him.”

  • King became depressed at times, Branch said. One night, King — alone with a whiskey — awakened friends in adjoining hotel rooms with his shouting: “I don’t want to do this anymore! I want to go back to my little church!”

    “The shameful truth is that very few people were paying attention to him,” Branch said.

In that light, on Thursday, CNN will air the introduction to a four month series titled Black in America.  The series begins with Eyewitness to Murder: The King Assassination.  It will be hosted by CNN anchor and special correspondent Soledad O’Brien.  Eyewitness to Murder airs Thursday April 3 at 8:00 p.m. Central Time.  Click here to learn more about the series and to view a trailer to ‘Eyewitness.’

Check back sometime before Thursday night, I hope to have something special to share with you before the series airs.

One Response to “CNN’s Black In America series looks at assassination; also King’s radical push for new America”

  1. Papa Giorgio Says:

    “I am much afraid that schools will prove to be great gates of hell unless they diligently labor in explaining the Holy Scriptures, engraving them in the hearts of youth. I advise no one to place his child where the scriptures do not reign paramount. Every institution in which men are not increasingly occupied with the word of God must become corrupt.” ~ Martin Luther King

    Shawn,

    I hope to engage you beyond such quips as, “Father Pfleger is [not] a great man. Enough said.”

    Just a bit of background on me. I grew up in the ghetto of Detroit in the 70’s and early 80’s, One school I went to is Guyton (satellite map still shows all the homes missing from the block via the riots, crime, and poverty). My grandmother is black, and while I look more Irish than anything else, I have cousins that are probably darker than you. So let’s get down and dirty boss… the Afrocentrism and liberation theology preached by both Wright and Pfleger are meant to separate the races (just like Kwanzaa) rather than bring them to the foot of the cross — equally.

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