The preacher in him would have continued speaking out against injustice, war and maybe even pop culture. He would likely not have run for president. He probably would have endured more harassment from J. Edgar Hoover.
Four decades after the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. fell to an
assassin's bullet, colleagues and biographers offer many answers to the
question: What if he had lived?
For his children, however, the speculation is more personal. They
know their lives would have turned out differently had they had their
beloved father to guide and teach them.
Instead, history moves on, remaking the world in myriad ways. The
nation has grappled with issues of race and inequity without the
benefit of King's evolving wisdom. A generation has come of age
celebrating him in a national holiday, like other figures of the frozen
past.
But given the trajectory of his life — from his appearance on the
national scene during the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott of 1955 to his
death on a second-floor balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis,
Tenn., on April 4, 1968 — some of those closest to him have a good idea
what King might be doing now and where we might be as a country.
In the months before his death, King was speaking out against the
growing U.S. involvement in Vietnam and was working with other civil
rights leaders on a Poor People's Campaign, with a march on Washington
scheduled for that May. He was in Memphis that spring day to support
striking sanitation workers.
Were King alive today, the disciple of Mahatma Gandhi would most
certainly be speaking out against the Iraq War, says King biographer
David J. Garrow. However, citing the famous "Drum Major Instinct"
sermon King delivered from the pulpit of Ebenezer Baptist Church in
Atlanta just two months before his death, Garrow says people might be
surprised to hear echoes of presidential candidate Barack Obama's
controversial former pastor.
"God didn't call America to engage in a senseless, unjust war,"
King said of the fighting in Vietnam. "And we are criminals in that
war. We've committed more war crimes almost than any nation in the
world, and I'm going to continue to say it."
While King didn't go as far as the Rev. Jeremiah Wright in
suggesting that God "damn America," he predicted the almighty might
punish this country for "our pride and our arrogance."
"And if you don't stop your reckless course," he imagined the deity
admonishing, "I'll rise up and break the backbone of your power."
Garrow and others feel comfortable saying King would not have sought elective office.
In 1967, King was being courted by the "New Left" to make a
third-party run for president on an anti-war ticket with the renowned
pediatrician, Dr. Benjamin Spock. FBI wiretaps reveal King gave serious
thought to running, but ultimately decided his role lay outside the
political arena.
The Rev. Joseph Lowery, who co-founded the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference with King and marched alongside him, doesn't
think time would have changed his friend's mind.
"I think Martin was a preacher, and I doubt very much if he would
have wanted to subject himself to the need to compromise and play
certain games that are requisite to political candidacy," says Lowery.
"I think he would have preferred to do what he did best, and that was
point out to ALL candidates and ALL officials ... 'Thus sayeth the
Lord.' "
Had he chosen that path, his enemies — chief among them FBI
Director Hoover — would have laid bare potentially embarrassing details
of King's personal life.
Then-U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy authorized the
wiretapping of King's home and offices in a campaign to ferret out
communists. The secret recording campaign failed to prove King was a
communist, but it did provide evidence of the civil rights leader's
extramarital affairs.
William C. Sullivan, head of domestic intelligence under Hoover,
told a congressional committee King was subjected to the same tactics
used against Soviet agents and, "No holds were barred."
Hoover's office was unable to marginalize King with his supporters
or cow him into silence with threats of exposure. But how might King
have fared in the Internet age, when every peccadillo is exposed and
every word parsed in a 24-hour news cycle?
The late Hosea Williams, one of King's chief lieutenants, once told
Martin Luther King III that his father was "unstoppable" because he had
conquered the two things that made men most vulnerable: the fear of
death and the love of wealth.
Some, however, feel King's influence was on the wane and at the
time of his death he had already reached the zenith of his public
career. He had "run out of things to do," the late Chauncey Eskridge, a
King attorney, told Garrow.
"The painful truth is that in his last two months or so before he
was killed, King was so exhausted — emotionally, spiritually,
physically — that a lot of the people closest ... to him were really
worried about his survival, his survival in the sense of would he have
some sort of breakdown," Garrow says. "It would be expecting something
truly superhuman, literally superhuman, for King to have continued the
pace of life he had lived over those 12 years for another 12 years,
never mind for another 20 or 40 years."
Journalist, author and commentator Juan Williams wonders whether
King would be able to connect in a meaningful way with today's youth.
Although he was just 39, the 1964 Nobel Peace laureate's insistence
on nonviolence was bumping up against the burgeoning black power
movement, says Williams, author of Eyes on the Prize and more recently Enough:
The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are
Undermining Black America — and What We Can Do About It.
"The big issue would be whether or not when he spoke out against
the excesses of the rappers, for example, or when he spoke out on the
high number of children born out of wedlock, whether or not he would be
lumped in with the Bill Cosbys of the world ...," Williams says.
But he has no doubt King would be a force on the international stage.
"I don't think he'd be in the petty fray in the way that we think
of some of these civil rights guys who are kind of ambulance chasers,"
says Williams. Instead, he sees an elder King as a man of "some
standing, some stature, that people wait to hear from him. ... I think
of Nelson Mandela in this way."
When King died, part of the nation's conscience died with him,
Lowery says. Four young children lost something much more personal.
To Marty, Yolanda, Dexter and Bernice, the baby, Martin Luther King
Jr. wasn't the icon or the dreamer. He was Daddy — the man who smelled
of Magic Shave and Aramis and chlorine from the YMCA pool where he
taught his sons to swim, and of the long-stemmed green onions that
somehow fell outside the prohibition against eating before the evening
blessing.
One of Bernice King's fondest memories is of the ritual she and her
father shared when he'd return from a trip, like the time he came home
for her fifth birthday party on March 29, 1968 — a day late because of
a march in Memphis. She would jump into his arms for the "kissing
game," in which each member of the family had a different spot on his
face. Bernice's "designated spot" was his forehead.
Had her father lived, the 45-year-old minister is fairly certain
she would be married and have children by now. But his graphic death
and ponderous legacy, she fears, have made her a less than a "viable
candidate" for domestic bliss. Part of the problem is her father set
the bar so high. She remembers something her mother often said.
"She said, 'I didn't marry a man. I married a mission,' " the
daughter says. "So for me, a spouse is more than just a companion. It's
someone to fulfill your destiny with. And I think in my case, because
the destiny is so great, because you had a man whose life was cut short
and there was some work that had to be completed, that you now have a
responsibility to participate in, that makes it a little more
difficult."
Martin III, likewise, feels he wouldn't be having his first child
at age 50 had his father not been killed. "I wasn't clear that I even
wanted to bring a child into the world," he says.
Both siblings are quite certain, however, that their father's death
did not determine their career paths. "I don't feel like I could have
been exposed to what my father and mother were doing without being
involved in this movement," says Martin King, president of the
nonprofit group Realizing the Dream.
Each year as the assassination anniversary approaches, legions
flock to the Lorraine Motel, which now houses the National Civil Rights
Museum. Among those who made the pilgrimage last week were two lions of
the civil rights movement — U.S. Rep. John Lewis and the Rev. Jesse
Jackson.
If King were alive today, Lewis has no doubt he would be speaking
just as forcefully and with as much authority as ever about the issues
that matter most to Americans, old and young.
"He would be the undisputed leader," the Georgia Democrat says.
"Martin Luther King Jr. 40 years later would still be speaking out
against poverty, hunger, against violence, against war."
Jackson, then 26 years old, was in the parking lot of the Lorraine
that day, talking up to King when he was shot. During his recent visit,
the aging activist stepped over a low wall meant to keep out ordinary
tourists, climbed the stairs to the balcony where his mentor lay dying
and wept.
King would be 79 now, but Jackson feels his power to move would
remain undiminished. "He might not be leading the marches, but he would
have set the frame of reference," says Jackson. "His voice would be a
voice of great moral authority."
Of all the "might be's" and "what if's," MLK III feels sure of one
thing. Had his father lived, the country would be closer to realizing
the "beloved community" he'd envisioned.
Still, he feels his father's guiding force pulling us inexorably in that direction.
"From my perspective, his light still shines," he says. "His voice,
his message, we're living every day. We're embracing more and more.
We're not as close to it as I would like to see us, but we're still
living it. We're still moving toward it."
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