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MLK Jr. Honored With National Memorial

Mlk Memorial

First Posted: 08/18/11 07:45 PM ET Updated: 10/18/11 06:12 AM ET

By Adelle M. Banks
Religion News Service

WASHINGTON (RNS) At age 93, the Rev. Gardner Taylor never thought he'd live to see the day when his friend Martin Luther King Jr. would be honored with a national memorial.

"I think it is singularly appropriate and long overdue," said Taylor, who helped found the Progressive National Baptist Convention 50 years ago to support the civil rights work of the friend he called "Mike."

"Mike King was minister and leader not only of black people," he said, "but he was leading the nation to what it ought to be."

Ahead of the memorial's Aug. 28 official dedication, the men and women who worked and marched alongside King said it's important to remember that before he was in the vanguard of the civil rights movement, he was a preacher of the gospel.

In fact, "it's really impossible to separate the civil leader from the religious leader," said Taylor, known nationally as the dean of African-American preachers. "He embodied both, and his life was a testimony to the unity of the two."

Designers intended for the memorial to demonstrate what they called King's "spiritual presence," with his 30-foot physical image sculpted in the "Stone of Hope," and a wall of inscriptions that include quotes from his sermons and speeches.

In his "I Have a Dream" speech, uttered 48 years ago to the day of the memorial dedication, King said: "With this faith, we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope."

The placement of the monument, along the Tidal Basin a stone's throw from monuments to Thomas Jefferson and Franklin D. Roosevelt, is particularly meaningful to the Rev. Otis Moss Jr., who was married 45 years ago by King.

"To have a nonviolent leader, spokesperson and martyr memorialized in the sight lines of Presidents Jefferson, Washington and Lincoln -- two of whom were slaveholders and one having a mistress who was black -- and to have this moral message is, I think, unprecedented," said Moss, a retired Cleveland pastor.

"This is more than stone. It is a statement, a moral statement."

Moss, who was part of the student sit-in movement in Atlanta in the 1960s, said King's words, etched in the stone surrounding his likeness, will help bring life to a figure who achieved iconic status.

"Here was a great moral leader ... a philosophical theologian whose teachings and preaching were anchored in the biblical message of love, justice and reconciliation."

It's not enough, however, to simply recall King's work and words. Those who soldiered alongside him say a new generation must pick up where he left off.

"It's a very fitting tribute that will serve, I think, a noble purpose in reminding people of his contribution and how far the country has come and hopefully will encourage people to join in the struggle," said the Rev. Joseph Lowery, a retired Atlanta minister who co-founded the Southern Christian Leadership Conference with King and others.

Previewing the memorial with other black Catholics recently, Sister Antona Ebo sat beneath the King sculpture and recalled joining five white sisters in a march in Selma, Ala., a few days after the 1965 Bloody Sunday attacks.

"I was hesitant about going because it was a matter of going and asking oneself, 'Do you want to be a martyr for somebody else's voting rights?"' she recalled.

Nearly a half century later, she said the martyred King is finally appropriately honored in the pantheon of national heroes. "It's his right to be honored in that way," she said, "but he probably would be the most reluctant to say so because of his humility."

The Rev. Charles Adams, a Detroit preacher and Harvard Divinity School professor who worked as an intern for King when he taught at Morehouse College in the early 1960s, agreed.

"His wife called me shortly after he died and said, 'You know, my husband isn't about monuments; he's about the movement,"' Adams recalled. "And that's true. I don't think he wants to be fixed in stone but he wants to be reincarnated into young people who are willing to fight and live and love and die for freedom and for justice."

CONTROVERSY SURROUNDS MLK MEMORIAL SCULPTURE

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By Adelle M. Banks Religion News Service WASHINGTON (RNS) At age 93, the Rev. Gardner Taylor never thought he'd live to see the day when his friend Martin Luther King Jr. would be honored with a n...
By Adelle M. Banks Religion News Service WASHINGTON (RNS) At age 93, the Rev. Gardner Taylor never thought he'd live to see the day when his friend Martin Luther King Jr. would be honored with a n...
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09:41 PM on 09/04/2011
We don't need a statue to celebrate Martin Luther King, the equality of all men alive today in the United States is all the testament we need to celebrate and cherish his memory.
12:10 PM on 08/22/2011
My first reaction was "Why it's Dear Leader!'

The increased size of MLK's statue compared to Lincoln and Jefferson, the socialistic, blocky look of it, emphasized by the stony face, square suit and unyielding, no-nonsense stance ... this Dr King is short on humility and has no feet either, whatever that signifies.

PLUS - the statue was created by a Chinese sculptor! Communist China, remember? They're the ones currently positioned to knock America off our collapsing economic pedestal. What the hell is going on anyway?
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Scheherazade Brown
01:34 PM on 08/22/2011
Not about the color of skin, it is about do unto others as you would have them to do unto you. Your post makes a statement that is outdated, and on the way totally out
08:11 AM on 08/20/2011
Oh and lets not forget having my civil rights striped from me.........
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WESmith
Just say no to gasoline
05:43 PM on 08/22/2011
We have no civil rights. We The People must cede each other these rights. Once We The People is changed to I The Person, anarchy begins.
08:08 AM on 08/20/2011
Hey, wanna hear a really good story on diabolical plots well check out mine on facebook.com search Gwendolyn Fraticelli, looking for pro bono attorney and anyone who may be interested in publishing my memoirs..............Well, I say my story telling is long overdue........hello, Muah is alive............can I get someone interested in my Story? Talk about discrimination, invasion of privacy, baggering,harassment, and becoming a public spectacle, read my story.......
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Jamal Alexander
Jamal 39
03:26 PM on 08/19/2011
I don't want to take anything from the people who want to honor King, but it should have been more of a civil rights memorial. King wasn't the only architect of the Civil Rights Movement. How about the man (I don't remember his name) who got the ball rolling, risking his own life for the cause. While a memorial of this caliber is overdue, lets include all those who contrubuted to the movement, and NOT just King. Too much credit has been given to King.
01:35 PM on 08/20/2011
I would not say too much credit has been given to King, how about not enough credit has been given to others.
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Moonspirit48
Progressive Homeschooler
12:28 PM on 08/29/2011
A thoughtful, considered response with which I agree. Fanned and faved.
12:38 PM on 08/19/2011
I am white and 50 years old and grew up with MLK as part of the core of my existence. My father was born in 1920 and grew up in a small town Texas.

For the early part of my life, Daddy talked a lot of trash about black people, and MLK, in particular. He also spoke of Otis.

For the longest, I didn't grasp who Otis was, just that my dad loved him like an uncle. But, in my pre-teens, it struck me that this employee of my grandfather had been black. Yet Daddy spoke so terribly of black people fighting for equality. That was when I began to understand how complex racism was.

I think a lot of people my age voted for Obama for one reason more than any others, because it was time we put a black man in the White House. I know that played a large part in my support. And with his inauguration, a necessary milestone has been passed, and every black child now knows that they can be president, too. Thankfully.

My father died in 1993. By the time he died, those slurs no longer passed his lips. He had grown like the country had. And I am positive, knowing him, that he would have voted for Obama - in no small part because of the actions of MLK, the black man who Daddy trashed talked until he grew up.
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Moonspirit48
Progressive Homeschooler
12:29 PM on 08/29/2011
Well said!!
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RedDogBear
11:03 AM on 08/19/2011
I'm an atheist but I greatly admire Dr. King. He is an inspiration for all Americans who care about justice and peace regardless of religious affiliation. I agree this monument is long overdue.
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09:33 AM on 08/19/2011
MLK will be honored when blacks stop damaging so many of their precious children, often beyond repair, and demanding that whites fix them. Whites are not competent to fix any children, and they too damage their own precious children beyond repair, just less often.
08:11 PM on 08/19/2011
Whites are not competent to fix any children,
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A wonderful comment from a student of the great teacher.
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12:16 AM on 08/20/2011
The great teacher is not here to assist me to understand your comment.
Are you willing to restate it in another form for my edification, or not?
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Evan Pritchard
Relax, in 200 years we'll all be wrong anyway.
08:41 AM on 08/19/2011
Establishment Clause lawsuit in 5...4...3...
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eddy joe
welcome to the machine
08:21 PM on 08/18/2011
I would like a monument to Nikola Tesla, please. And then one for Dwight Eisenhower.