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Diversity
Affairs Feature
Dr. Martin Luther
King Jr. Day
A National and Worldwide Holiday
Events of the Day
IN THE SPIRIT OF UNITY & SERVICE
REMEMBER! CELEBRATE! ACT!
Martin Luther King Jr.
In 1983, the third Monday in
January was designated a federal legal holiday in honor of Martin
Luther King Jr.’s birthday.
Dr. King sought to forge the
common ground on which people from all walks of life could join
together to address important community issues. Working alongside
individuals of all ages, races and backgrounds, Dr. King encouraged
Americans to come together to strengthen communities, alleviate
poverty, and acknowledge dignity and respect for all human beings.
Service, he realized, was the great equalizer.
On January 15, 2007,
as we celebrate the 21st anniversary of the Martin Luther King
Jr. federal holiday, Americans across the country will celebrate
by honoring the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Hundreds
of thousands of Americans will remember and memorialize Dr. King
by participating in service projects in their communities. Together,
they will honor King’s legacy of tolerance,
peace, and equality by meeting community needs and making the holiday
NOT a day off but a day ON for international service, community,
and social justice.
The King Center in Atlanta, acting as the primary promoter of the
King Holiday Observance, continues to emphasize Dr. King's SERVICE
to humanity with the hope that by observing the Holiday in this
way, citizens re-dedicate themselves and their lives to the Beloved
Community in which he so believed.
Coretta Scott King, the beloved wife of Dr. Martin Luther King
was the founder and head of the King Center until her physical
death in 2004. Her words below are poignant, intimate, and profoundly
passionate. She writes from her firsthand experience with her husband
and teacher. She has learned well, as may we all of what it means
to keep an unswerving dedication to the cause for peace amongst
all people. Active service to those in need, thereby is a way we
can break down perceived barriers of all kinds and allow the light
of humanities’ love to shine upon us all.
The Meaning of the
Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday
By Coretta Scott King
The Martin Luther King, Jr. Holiday celebrates the life and legacy
of a man who brought hope and healing to America. We commemorate
as well the timeless values he taught us through his example --
the values of courage, truth, justice, compassion, dignity, humility
and service that so radiantly defined Dr. King’s character
and empowered his leadership. On this holiday, we commemorate the
universal, unconditional love, forgiveness and nonviolence that
empowered his revolutionary spirit.
We commemorate Dr. King’s inspiring words, because his voice
and his vision filled a great void in our nation, and answered
our collective longing to become a country that truly lived by
its noblest principles. Yet, Dr. King knew that it wasn’t
enough just to talk the talk, that he had to walk the walk for
his words to be credible. And so we commemorate on this holiday
the man of action, who put his life on the line for freedom and
justice every day, the man who braved threats and jail and beatings
and who ultimately paid the highest price to make democracy a reality
for all Americans.
The King Holiday honors the life and contributions of America’s
greatest champion of racial justice and equality, the leader who
not only dreamed of a color-blind society, but who also lead a
movement that achieved historic reforms to help make it a reality.
On this day we commemorate Dr. King’s great dream of a vibrant,
multiracial nation united in justice, peace and reconciliation;
a nation that has a place at the table for children of every race
and room at the inn for every needy child. We are called on this
holiday, not merely to honor, but to celebrate the values of equality,
tolerance and interracial sister and brotherhood he so compellingly
expressed in his great dream for America.
It is a day of interracial and intercultural cooperation and sharing.
No other day of the year brings so many peoples from different
cultural backgrounds together in such a vibrant spirit of brother
and sisterhood. Whether you are African-American, Hispanic or Native
American, whether you are Caucasian or Asian-American, you are
part of the great dream Martin Luther King, Jr. had for America.
This is not a black holiday; it is a peoples' holiday. And it is
the young people of all races and religions who hold the keys to
the fulfillment of his dream.
We commemorate on this holiday the ecumenical leader and visionary
who embraced the unity of all faiths in love and truth. And though
we take patriotic pride that Dr. King was an American, on this
holiday we must also commemorate the global leader who inspired
nonviolent liberation movements around the world. Indeed, on this
day, programs commemorating my husband’s birthday are being
observed in more than 100 nations.
The King Holiday celebrates Dr. King’s global vision of the
world house, a world whose people and nations had triumphed over
poverty, racism, war and violence. The holiday celebrates his vision
of ecumenical solidarity, his insistence that all faiths had something
meaningful to contribute to building the beloved community.
The Holiday commemorates America’s pre-eminent advocate of
nonviolence --- the man who taught by his example that nonviolent
action is the most powerful, revolutionary force for social change
available to oppressed people in their struggles for liberation.
This holiday honors the courage of a man who endured harassment,
threats and beatings, and even bombings. We commemorate the man
who went to jail 29 times to achieve freedom for others, and who
knew he would pay the ultimate price for his leadership, but kept
on marching and protesting and organizing anyway.
Every King holiday has been a national "teach-in" on
the values of nonviolence, including unconditional love, tolerance,
forgiveness and reconciliation, which are so desperately-needed
to unify America. It is a day of intensive education and training
in Martin’s philosophy and methods of nonviolent social change
and conflict-reconciliation. The Holiday provides a unique opportunity
to teach young people to fight evil, not people, to get in the
habit of asking themselves, "what is the most loving way I
can resolve this conflict?"
On the King holiday, young people learn about the power of unconditional
love even for one's adversaries as a way to fight injustice and
defuse violent disputes. It is a time to show them the power of
forgiveness in the healing process at the interpersonal as well
as international levels.
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is not only for celebration and remembrance,
education and tribute, but above all a day of service. All across
America on the Holiday, his followers perform service in hospitals
and shelters and prisons and wherever people need some help. It
is a day of volunteering to feed the hungry, rehabilitate housing,
tutoring those who can't read, mentoring at-risk youngsters, consoling
the broken-hearted and a thousand other projects for building the
beloved community of his dream.
Dr. King once said that we all have to decide whether we "will
walk in the light of creative altruism or the darkness of destructive
selfishness. Life's most persistent and nagging question, he said,
is `what are you doing for others?'" he would quote Mark 9:35,
the scripture in which Jesus of Nazareth tells James and John "...whosoever
will be great among you shall be your servant; and whosoever among
you will be the first shall be the servant of all." And when
Martin talked about the end of his mortal life in one of his last
sermons, on February 4, 1968 in the pulpit of Ebenezer Baptist
Church, even then he lifted up the value of service as the hallmark
of a full life. "I'd like somebody to mention on that day
Martin Luther King, Jr. tried to give his life serving others," he
said. "I want you to say on that day, that I did try in my
life...to love and serve humanity.
We call you to commemorate this
Holiday by making your personal commitment to serve humanity with
the vibrant spirit of unconditional love that was his greatest
strength, and which empowered all of the great victories of his
leadership. And with our hearts open to this spirit of unconditional
love, we can indeed achieve the Beloved Community of Martin Luther
King, Jr.’s dream.
May we who follow Martin now pledge to serve humanity, promote
his teachings and carry forward his legacy into the 21st Century.
Sample
the words of this sage and see if they ring true for you as well.
If you like, you can click on the link for the entire speech.
"I have a dream",
August 28, 1963
http://martin-luther-king-day.123holiday.net/i_have_a_dream.html
‘Like
an unchecked cancer, hate corrodes the personality and eats away
its vital unity. Hate destroys a man's sense of values and his objectivity.
It causes him to describe the beautiful as ugly and the ugly as beautiful,
and to confuse the true with the false and the false with the true.’ - Martin
Luther King, Jr., Strength to Love, 1963.
How to Celebrate? Here is a starter: Martin
Luther King Jr. Day Kid Song
To The Tune Of He's Got The
Whole World In His Hands
Dr. Martin Luther King had a dream (Song
three times)
He had the whole world in his dream.
He had me and you, in his dream
He had me and you, in his dream
He had me and you, in his dream
He had the whole world in his dream.
Now Is The Time... a video of action
Now is the time video link
"Now Is The Time..." is a six minute video to promote the Martin
Luther King, Jr. Day of Service to all potential partners - nonprofit, corporate
and business, schools and higher education.
Watch the video