Our two youngest children were Bar and Bat Mitzvot at
Temple Isaiah on Pico Boulevard, here in Los Angeles. The synagogue has been an
important part of our family’s life for years. Imagine then my shock and delight
to read in the Temple online newsletter that in 1960, Martin Luther King spoke
from the same pulpit. And that a dusty reel
of tape was recently discovered, treated to enhance its audio quality, and that
it now lives on as Dr. King’s gift of wisdom across 53 years. He delivered a kind of State of the Union for
civil rights in our sanctuary, a snapshot of progress and of the job still ahead
for America. He was just 31 years old. You can hear his speech here.
It takes a while to load… I think the
Temple Isaiah computer server was delivered by Noah in his Ark. Hang in there; it’s worth it.
Dr. King starts talking at 13 m. 36 s., but his
introduction by Rabbi Lewis before that also rises to the occasion. This was 1960,
at the height of the grand alliance between progressive Jews and Blacks in our
country, when the white folks who marched bravely into danger with Dr. King
were disproportionately Jewish. Rabbi Lewis compares MLK to Moses, who led his
people from the front, into the Red Sea… into waters which did not part until
they were in it up to their necks. He points to Dr. King as the one man catalyst,
the leader, the inspiration, who persevered to reach the tipping point towards
justice in America.
There are several startling revelations for me in Dr.
King’s speech. He seamlessly and
completely places the U.S. civil rights struggle in the context of
emancipation, liberation, justice and self-determination for all the colonial
peoples in the world. He had recently returned from seeing the British Union
Jack lowered in Ghana, and seen the flag of the brand new independent Ghana raised
to replace it. And he had just met in India with Jawaharlal Nehru, that country’s
first Prime Minister. Dr. King points out that it was an Amendment to the
Indian Constitution that made the segregation of Untouchables illegal. Dr. King
advocates forcefully for legislative change to deliver meaningful integration
of the ballot box in America… But the
Civil Rights Act (1964) and the Voting Rights Act (1965) were still years away.
It is startling, with our African American President now in
his second term, to realize in listening to Dr. King’s words, just how recently
this would have seemed some lunatic dream of an improbable Utopia:
Fifty years ago or less than that, a year hardly passed that numerous
Negroes were not lynched by some vicious mob. But lynchings have about ceased in
the United States. Today there are still some isolated cases, but lynchings
have about ceased. Fifty years ago, twenty five years ago, most of the southern
States prevented Negroes from becoming registered voters, through several
means, but one of them the Poll Tax. And
the Poll Tax has been eliminated now in all but four States. And there is great
hope now that it will be eliminated in all of these States.
It was a mere six years since the Supreme Court had ruled
in Brown vs. Board of Education that the
Separate but Equal doctrine it had mandated fifty eight years earlier in Plessy vs. Ferguson delivered no
equality at all… it had instead instituted segregated inequality.
We have broken loose from the Egypt of slavery. We moved through the
wilderness of separate but equal. And now we stand on the border of the
promised land of integration. And suddenly there is hope that we will be able
to enter this new and great land of integration. And so we have come a long,
long way since 1896.
But Dr. King was not nearly done. His frustration with
the job unfinished nationally and internationally is palpable, and one senses
he’d feel the same way today:
It is a fact that we have come a long, long way, but it is not the
truth. You see, a fact is merely the absence of contradiction, but truth is the
presence of coherence. Truth is the relatedness of facts. Not only have we come
a long, long way, but we have a long, long way to go. If I stopped at this
point, I would leave you the victims of a dangerous optimism. If I stopped
here, I would leave you the victims of an illusion, wrapped in superficiality.
Organizations like the Ku Klux Klan and the White Citizens Council are
on the march, and they are saying that they will never comply with the Supreme
Court’s decision. We have a long, long way to go in the area of voter
registration. For conniving methods are still being used to stop Negroes from
voting. There are over five million Negro voters in the south, yet there are
only 1,300,000 registered. Not only that, violence is a reality in many
instances. Even though there are not as many lynchings, we find that
individuals who are merely concerned and determined to have equal rights face
physical violence. Court injustices stand supreme in so many southern situations. Both Negro and white persons who
dare to take a stand for freedom constantly face violence and abuse,
persecution and arrest and bombings. Not only are individual homes bombed, but
churches and synagogues and schools are being bombed.
There are many remarkable parallels for 2013 amid Dr.
King’s insights into the history of slavery in America.
We have the capacity of justifying the rightness of the wrong, and this
is exactly what happened during the days of slavery. Many of the slave owners
fell victim to the danger of … a too literalistic interpretation of the Bible. There
is a danger that religion and the Bible, not properly interpreted, will be used
as instruments to crystallize the status quo; and this happened.
And we should ponder how things have changed, in the
relative diligence of our three branches of government in driving progress in
our United States today:
The leadership we should have from the Federal government has come
mainly from the Judicial Branch. The Legislative and Executive Branches of the
government have been all too apathetic and sometimes hypocritical in this area.
And if the problem is to be solved, all branches of the government must work
with bold and grim determination to implement the law of the land.
Long before technology shrank the world, long before we
were all connected by the Internet and our globalized economy, in our temple Dr.
King spoke of an inescapable but fragile future where no one would last long as
an island:
If we do not learn to live together as brothers in the world, we will
all perish together as fools. For we are all caught in an inescapable network
of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. And whatever affects one nation
or one individual directly affects all nations or individuals indirectly.
Listening to the 1960 tape, it was clear to me that we are
often blind to the sweeping arc of history, and our place in it. We focus on
this year, next year, and maybe the one after that. We forget Edmund Burke's “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat
it.” Gratitude to Rabbi Gan for looking in a dusty box and giving new
life to an old tape full of present wisdom:
This is the challenge of the hour. This problem will not be solved in
America and will not be solved in the world until people of goodwill rise up,
and people of great determination will take a stand, realizing that wherever
there is hate, wherever there is a lack of brotherhood, wherever there is a
lack of real community, chaos will ultimately set in. And so someone must come
to the pulpit dissatisfied…
Let us be maladjusted. It may be that through such maladjustment we may
be able to move out from the bleak and desolate midnight of man’s inhumanity to
man, into the bright and glittering daybreak of justice. And this will be the
day when men everywhere will be able to join hands and sing a new song, black
men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics will be able to
come together and sing anew “ Free at last, free at last! Thank God Almighty,
we are free at last!”
Labels: 1960, African American history, black history, Civil Rights, emancipation, Jewish history, Jews and Blacks, Martin Luther King, MLK, Peter Samuelson, Temple Isaiah
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