I really hope the publishers don't mind my excerpting from the Trumpet of Conscience. If you have scruples you can Google the title and read at least parts of it on Google Books. After this many years you'd think the material would be more widely available. As of the end of this year it will be forty six years since he gave the speech. Of course his increasingly radical and international sympathies don't fit with the King we've allowed to be tamed down and turned into a national icon. I wonder how he'd feel about it if we could ask him. I suspect he'd ask what we were doing to keep the dream alive.
I don’t know whether it’s a deliberate strategy or not. But,
it does seem that the rise of the cult of the individual since the successes of
the push for the right of women to vote, the labor movement and the civil
rights movement isn’t just a coincidence. These are all examples of collective
movements to ensure the rights of the individual. And as Dr. King’s speech
demonstrates it works. Again this is a bit long. But it’s worth the read. Again
I have to ask myself what the world would look like if King, Kennedy and Merton
had managed to survive that fateful year.
NONVIOLENCE AND
SOCIAL CHANGE by Martin Luther King Jr.
There is nothing wrong with a traffic law which says you
have to stop for a red light. But when a fire is raging, the fire truck goes
right through that red light, and normal traffic had better get out of its way.
Or, when a man is bleeding to death, the ambulance goes through those red
lights at top speed.
There is a fire raging now for the Negroes and the poor of
this society. They are living in tragic conditions because of the terrible
economic injustices that keep them locked in as an “underclass,” as the
sociologists are now calling it. Disinherited people all over the world are
bleeding to death from deep social and economic wounds. They need brigades of
ambulance drivers who will have to ignore the red lights of the present system
until the emergency is solved.
Massive civil disobedience is a strategy for social change
which is at least as forceful as an ambulance with its siren on full. In the
past ten years, nonviolent civil disobedience has made a great deal of history,
especially in the Southern United States . When
we and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference went to Birmingham , Alabama ,
in 1963, we had decided to take action on the matter of integrated public
accommodations. We knew that the Civil Rights commission had written powerful
documents calling for change, calling for the very rights we were demanding.
But nobody did anything about the Commission’s report. Nothing was done until
we acted on these very issues, and demonstrated before the court of world
opinion the urgent need for change. It was the same story with voting rights.
The Civil Rights Commission, three years before we went to Selma , had recommended the changes we started
marching for, but nothing was done until, in 1965, we created a crisis the
nation couldn’t ignore. Without violence, we totally disrupted the system, the
lifestyle of Birmingham , and then of Selma , with their unjust
and unconstitutional laws. Our Birmingham
struggle came to its dramatic climax when some 3,500 demonstrators virtually
filled every jail in that city and surrounding communities, and 4,000 more
continued to march and demonstrate nonviolently. The city knew then in terms
that were crystal clear that Birmingham
could no long function until the demands of the Negro community were met. The
same kind of dramatic crisis was created in Selma two years later. The result on the
national scene was the Civil Rights bill and the Voting rights Act, as
President and Congress responded to the drama and the creative tension
generated by the carefully planned demonstrations.
Of course, by now it is obvious that new laws are not
enough. The emergency we now face is economic, and it is a desperate and
worsening situation. For the thirty five million poor people in America – not
even to mention, just yet, the poor in the nations – there is a kind of
strangulation in the air. In our society it is murder, psychologically, to deprive
a man of a job or an income. You are in substance saying to that man that he
has no right to exist. You are in a real way depriving him of life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness, denying in his case the very creed of his society.
Now, millions of people are being strangled that way. The problem is
international in scope. And it is getting worse, as the gap between the poor
and the “affluent society” increases.
The question that now divides the people who want radically
to change that situation is: can a program of nonviolence – even if it
envisions massive civil disobedience – realistically expect to deal with such
an enormous, entrenched evil?
First of all, will nonviolence work, psychologically, after
the summer of 1967? Many people feel that nonviolence as a strategy for social
change was cremated in the flames of the urban riots of the last two years.
They tell us that Negroes have only now begun to find their true manhood in
violence; that the riots prove not only that Negroes hate whites, but that,
compulsively, they must destroy them.
This bloodlust interpretation ignores one of the most
striking features of the city riots. Violent they certainly were. But the
violence, to a startling degree, was focused against property rather than
against people. There were very few cases of injury to person, and the vast
majority of the rioters were not involved at all in attacking people. The much
publicized “death toll” that marked the riots, and the many injuries, was
overwhelmingly inflicted on the rioters by the military. It is clear that the
riots were exacerbated by police action that was designed to injure or even to
kill people. As for the snipers, no account of the riots claims that more than
one or two dozen people were involved in sniping. From the facts, an unmistakable
pattern emerges: a handful of Negroes used gunfire substantially to intimidate,
not to kill; and all of the other participants had a different target –
property.
I am aware that there are many who wince at a distinction
between property and persons – who hold both sacrosanct. My views are not so
rigid. A life is sacred. Property is intended to serve life, and no matter how
much we surround it with rights and respect, it has no personal being. It is
part of the earth man walks on’ it is not man.
The focus on property in the 1967 riots is not accidental.
It has a message’ it is saying something.
If hostility to whites were ever going to dominate a Negro’s
attitude and reach murderous proportions, surely is would be during a riot. But
this rare opportunity for bloodletting was sublimated into arson, or turned
into a kind of stormy carnival of free – merchandise distribution. Why did the
rioters avoid personal attacks? The explanation cannot be fear of retribution,
because the physical risks incurred in the attacks on property were no less
than for personal assaults. The military forces were treating acts of petty
larceny as equal to murder. Far more rioters took chances with their own lives,
in their attacks on property, than threatened the life of anyone else. Why were
they so violent with property then? Because property represents the white power
structure, which they were attacking and trying to destroy. A curious proof of
the symbolic aspect of the looting for some who took part in it the fact that,
after the riots, police received hundreds of call form Negroes trying to return
merchandise they had taken. Those people wanted the experience of taking, of
redressing the power imbalance that property represents. Possession, afterward,
was secondary.
A deeper level of hostility came out in arson, which was far
more dangerous than the looting. But it, too, was a demonstration and a
warning. It was directed against symbols of exploitation, and it was designed
to express the depth of anger in the community.
What does this restraint in the summer riots mean for our
future strategy?
If one can find a core of nonviolence toward persons, even
during the riots when emotions were exploding, it means that nonviolence should
not be written off for the future as a force in Negro life. Many people believe
that the urban Negro is too angry and too sophisticated to be nonviolent. Those
same people dismiss the nonviolent marches in the South and try to describe
them as processions of pious, elderly ladies. The fact is that in all the
marches we have organized some men of very violent tendencies have been
involved. It was routine for us to collect hundreds of knives from our own
ranks before the demonstrations, in case of momentary weakness. And in Chicago last year we saw
some of the most violent individuals accepting nonviolent discipline. Day after
day during those Chicago
marches I walked in our lines and I never say anyone retaliate with violence.
There were lots of provocations, not only the screaming white hoodlums lining
the sidewalks, but also groups of Negro militants talking about guerrilla
warfare. We had some gang leaders and members marching with us. I remember
walking with the Blackstone rangers while bottles were flying from the
sidelines, and I saw their noses being broken and blood flowing from their
wounds; and I saw them continue and not retaliate, not one of them, with
violence. I am convinced that even very violent temperaments can be channeled
through nonviolent discipline, if the movement is moving, if they can act
constructively and express through an effective channel their very legitimate
anger.
But even if non violence can be valid, psychologically, for
the protesters who want change, is it going to be effective, strategically,
against a government and a status quo that have so far resisted this summer’s
demands on the grounds that “we must not reward the rioters?” Far from
rewarding the rioters, far from even giving a hearing to their just and urgent
demands, the administration has ignored its responsibility for the causes of
the riots, and instead has used the negative aspects of them to justify
continued inaction on the underlying issues. The administration’s only concrete
response was to initiate a study and call for a day of prayer. As a minister, I
take prayer too seriously to use it as an excuse for avoiding work and
responsibility. When a government commands more wealth and power than has ever
been known in the history of the world, and offers no more than this, it is
worse than blind, it is provocative. It is paradoxical but fair to say that
Negro terrorism is incited less on ghetto street corners than in the halls of
Congress.
I intended to show that nonviolence will be effective, but
not until it has achieved the massive dimensions, the disciplined planning, and
the intense commitment of a sustained direct-action movement of civil
disobedience on the national scale.
The dispossessed of this nation – the poor, both white and
Negro – live in a cruelly unjust society. They must organize a revolution
against that injustice, not against the lives of the persons who are their
fellow citizens, but against the structures through which the society is
refusing to take means which have been called for, and which are at hand, to
lift the load of poverty.
The only real revolutionary, people say, is a man who has
nothing to lose. There are millions of poor people in this country who have
very little, or even nothing, to lose. If they can be helped to take action
together, they will do so with a freedom and a power that will be a new and
unsettling force in our complacent national life. Beginning in the New Year, we
will be recruiting three thousand of the poorest citizens from ten different
urban and rural areas to initiate and lead a sustained, massive, direct action
movement in Washington .
Those who choose to join this initial three thousand, this nonviolent army,
this “freedom church” of the poor will work with us for three months to develop
nonviolent action skills. Then we will move on Washington , determined to stay there until
the legislative and executive branches of the government take serious and
adequate action on jobs and income. A delegation of poor people can walk into a
high official’s office with a carefully, collectively prepared list of demands.
(If you’re poor, if you’re unemployed anyway, you can choose to stay in Washington as long as
the struggle needs you.) And if the official say, “But Congress would have to
approve this,” or “But the president would have to be consulted on that,” you
can say, “All right, we’ll wait.” And you can settle down in his office for as
long a stay as necessary. If you are, let’s say from rural Mississippi, and
have never had medical attention, and your children are undernourished and
unhealthy, you can take those little children into the Washington hospitals and
stay with them there until the medical workers cope with their needs, and in
showing it your children you will have shown this country a sight that will
make it stop in its busy tracks and think hard about what it has done. The many
people who will come and join this three thousand, from all groups in the
country’s life, will play a supportive role deciding to be poor for a time
along with the dispossessed who are asking for their right to jobs or income –
jobs, income, the demolition of slums, and the rebuilding by the people who
live there of new communities in their place, in fact, a new economic deal for
the poor.
Why camp in Washington
to demand these things? Because only the federal congress and administration
can decide to use the billions of dollars we need for a real war on poverty. We
need, not a new law, but a massive, new national program. This Congress has
done nothing to help such measures, and plenty to hinder them. Why should congress
care about our dying cities? It is still dominated by senior representatives of
the rural South, who still united in an obstructive coalition with
unprogressive Northerners to prevent public funds from going where they are
socially needed. We broke that coalition in 1963 and 1964, when the Civil
Rights and Voting Rights laws were passed. We need to break it again by the
size and force of our movement, and the best place to that is before the eyes
and inside the building of these same Congressmen. The people of this country,
if not the Congressmen, are ready for a serious economic attack on slums and
unemployment, as two recent polls by Lou Harris have revealed. So we have to
make Congress ready to act on the plight of the poor. We will prod and
sensitize the legislators, the administrators, and all the wielders of power
until they have faced this utterly imperative need.
I have said that the problem, the crisis we face, is
international in scope. In fact, it is inseparable from an international
emergency which involves the poor, the dispossessed, and the exploited of the
whole world.
Can a nonviolent, direct-action movement find application on
the international level, to confront economic and political problems? I believe
it can. It is clear to me that the next stage of the movement is to become
international. National movements within the developed countries – forces that
focus on London , or Paris ,
or Washington , or Ottawa – must help to make it politically
feasible for their governments to undertake the kind of massive aid that the
developing countries need if they are to break the chains of poverty. We in the
West must bear in mind that the poor countries are poor primarily because we
have exploited them through political or economic colonialism. Americans in
particular must help their nation repent of her modern economic imperialism.
But movements in our countries alone will not be enough. In Latin America , for example, national reform movements
have almost despaired of nonviolent methods; many young men, even many priests,
have joined guerrilla movements in the hills. So many of Latin America’s
problems have roots in the United States of America that we need to form a
solid, united movement, nonviolently conceived and carried through, so that
pressure can be brought to bear on the capital and government power structures
concerned, from both sides of the problem at once. I think that may be the only
hope for a nonviolent solution in Latin America
today; and one of the more powerful expressions of nonviolence may come out of
that international coalition of socially aware forces, operating outside
governmental frameworks.
In a world facing the revolt of ragged and hungry masses of
God’s children’ in a world torn between the tensions of East and West, white
and colored, individualists and collectivists; in a world whose cultural and
spiritual power lags so far behind her technological capabilities that we live
each day on the verge of nuclear co-annihilation; in this world, nonviolence is
no longer an option for intellectual analysis, it is an imperative for action.
No comments:
Post a Comment