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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCross Burned on Martin Luther King Jr's Lawn
"I learned that courage was not the absence of fear, but the triumph over it."(Nelson Mandela)
It is Spring, a time when mild temperatures bring homeowners outside to rake up old grass or tend to new flowers poking up their heads. But no one expects to find what Martin Luther King Jr. found on the front lawn of his new house in April of 1960 -- a burned cross. Clad in a dark suit, tie and dress shoes, with his little boy standing beside him, Dr. King nonchalantly bent down and pulled out the calling card of the Ku Klux Klan. Most of us would not do such an act with nonchalance. However, given what the black civil rights leader how already endured in his young life, it was completely within his character.
Martin Luther King Jr. received dozens of death threats due to his role as a civil rights leader. In 1956, Dr. King's Alabama house was bombed, blowing the windows out and damaging the front porch. King was just relieved to hear that his wife and children were unharmed; speaking to an angry crowd after the bombing, he warned: "He who lives by the sword will perish by the sword...We must meet hate with love." In 1958, Dr. King travelled to New York City for a book signing in Harlem where he was stabbed by an assailant and rushed to the hospital. Death threats were part and parcel of his job: Dr. King would not be intimidated.
Martin Luther King Jr. knew the world was watching on that day that he found a burned cross on his lawn. If he had shown fear, he would have succumbed to fear. He would not have sat at a lunch counter and waited for his order to be filled while onlookers spat on him in 1960; he would not have written his "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" in 1963 or delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech to a sea of protesters in Washington D.C. in 1963; he would not have marched over the Edmund Pettus Bridge to face a wall of Alabama state troopers on Bloody Sunday in 1965; he would not have faced the bricks, bottles and firecrackers thrown by a jeering crowd as he led a march through an all-white suburb of Chicago in 1966; and he would not have roused the crowd with his "I've Been to the Mountaintop" speech in 1968, only hours before he was assassinated.
Yes, a burned cross wasn't exactly how Martin Luther King Jr. expected to be welcomed to the neighbourhood back in 1960. But his response spoke volumes.
"So do not be overcome with evil, but overcome evil with good." (Romans 12:21)
http://alinefromlinda.blogspot.com/2014/04/cross-burned-on-martin-luther-king-jrs.html#:~:text=found%20on%20the%20front%20lawn,of%20the%20Ku%20Klux%20Klan.
sprinkleeninow
(20,246 posts)goodness or love. I bless God for one of His crowns of creation, Dr. King.
sheshe2
(83,751 posts)I bless the memory of Dr King.
Dem2theMax
(9,651 posts)"I bless God for one of His crowns of creation, Dr. King."
That is absolutely beautiful. And so appropriate for Dr. King.
With so many who died before their time, my mind often wanders to a place where I wonder what they would have done, going forward, had they been allowed more years to walk this Earth.
sprinkleeninow
(20,246 posts)are alive in spirit, not as yet rejoined with the body which, again, our belief that will come to pass in the Eighth Day of the restoration of all creation.
In addition, those who have 'fallen asleep' (a term), being alive in the spirit, continue to have limited 'knowledge' of our life on earth and can and do intercede for us. So Dr. King haven received his place in eternity, I believe asks for all goodness and mercy to come upon those who are needing help presently.
smirkymonkey
(63,221 posts)He was an amazing person. I wish I could be so loving and forgiving, but I have a long way to go. I still have too much hate in my heart toward people who are evil and hateful. I am just not that evolved yet. It is a goal I hope to achieve.