Issue 364
| Front
Page |
| News Headlines
|
|
|
| Local
and Regional Affairs |
|
|
|
Editorial |
|
|
|
Features
& Commentry |
|
|
|
International News
|
|
|
|
Opinion |
|
|
|
|
ATLANTA, January 17, 2009
— Martin Luther King's flame has always burned brightest in Atlanta, but
in a real sense, the torch is being passed to Washington, D.C., with his
birthday and holiday taking on dual meaning for many Americans because
it falls on the eve of Barack Obama's inauguration.
While Georgia's capital has traditionally been the place for the most
high-profile observance that day, this year it will share the spotlight
with the nation's capital.
But the shift from King's hometown does nothing to diminish the
excitement of the moment, said William Jelani Cobb, an American history
professor at Atlanta's Spelman College.
"That we would have a celebration of King's birth and the inauguration
of the first black president on consecutive days is almost too much to
ask for," Cobb said. "(Barack) Obama's election represents the
fulfillment of the most well-known of King's dreams, that people would
be judged by the content of their character."
As for Obama, part of his King Day will be spent volunteering as part of
a national call for service. The back-to-back King holiday and
inauguration are expected to draw millions.
Still, Atlanta will be in the spotlight with the traditional pomp and
circumstance at King's spiritual home, Ebenezer Baptist Church,
including the ceremonial wreath laying at the tomb and the ecumenical
service. But this year's keynote speaker is Pastor Rick Warren, a
Southern Baptist who opposes gay marriage.
That speech is just a warm-up, with Warren whisking away to Washington
to give the invocation at Tuesday's inauguration, which is expected to
draw more than 3 million people. Gay advocates assailed Obama for
choosing Warren, while many conservative Christians hailed the pick.
For many, Obama's swearing in will be a culmination of a long holiday
weekend in D.C. for King and inaugural events.
La'Keitha Daniels, an attorney in Atlanta, has been to the King service
at Ebenezer, where King preached from 1960 until his assassination in
1968. She was also there last year when Obama came on the Sunday before
the federal holiday.
This holiday, though, will be spent honoring both men in Washington.
"Hundreds of thousands of people are going there because it's the
beginning of Dr. King's dream being realized," Daniels said. "Everyone
feels that we are truly on the cusp of change and seeing the things he
only dreamt about becoming a reality."
For months, the King legacy permeated Obama's campaign. He invoked the
Southern Baptist preacher many times during his candidacy and accepted
the Democratic nomination for president on the 40th anniversary of
King's "I Have a Dream" speech.
King's nephew, Isaac Newton Farris Jr., believes his uncle's birthday
has even more special meaning this year.
"Clearly, we set the tone in Atlanta in past years," said Farris,
president and chief executive officer of The King Center where the
preacher and his widow, Coretta Scott King, are entombed and where an
eternal flame burns in civil rights leader's honor.
But this year will be clearly different. Only one of King's four
children, Bernice, will attend the church service. Martin Luther King
III will already be in Washington and Dexter King — who lives in
California — will not be in Atlanta. Their sister, Yolanda, died in
2007.
Even Ebenezer's pastor, the Rev. Raphael Warnock, won't be around for
the service for the first time since 2004. He's heading to Washington.
"If anything, the inauguration underscores once again the continuing
significance of Martin Luther King Jr.'s prophetic voice in his time,
and in our own," Warnock said. "It has raised the American consciousness
of the work of a prophet that it held at arms' length during his
lifetime."
Source: AP
|