Thursday, January 10, 1985 The Pendulum Page 3 Other Opinions King’s birthday reminds all of racism problems book The Will To Power caused King much deliberation. The result of this reading was his near despair of his belief in the power of love for solving social problems. He was puzzled by the value of love for social good and began to question whether Jesus’ ethical messages were only good for individual con flict resolutions, not for racial groups or nations resolutions. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. By Bobby Drakeford Born into a society that associated blacks with “in ferior” and whites with “super ior,” Martin Luther King Jr., through self-discipline, de veloped a philosphy that awakened millions to the injus tices caused by the segregation of the races. Growing up in the middle- class black neighborhood in Atlanta, the young King was protected from the extreme forms of racism most blacks ex perienced. His religious up bringing in his father’s church taught him that all men were created equal, although he wit nessed many incidents that suggested otherwise. A shoe store attendant’s re fusal to serve his father in the front of the store, the forbid ding of friendship by his white playmates, parents, and the slapping of his face by a white woman all rankled deeply in his mind. However, not even these bit ter racist experiences caused him to turn his resentment into violence. He believed his mother when she told him, “Don’s let these things impress you. Don’t let it make you feel you’re not as good as white peo ple, and don’t you forget it.” Puzzled by the contradictions of his parent’s teachings, and the lessons taught by a racist Society, King sought to under stand the causes of racism. 1 When King graduated from Morehouse College in 1948 at the age of 19, a growing discon tent of black people with seg regation was forming the roots of the forecoming civil right movements. Unexpected ally The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and other organizations fought for equal ity. They found an unexpected friend in President Truman throughout the middle and late 1940s. Truman created various interracial committees to study civil rights. While the nation experi enced the early stages of the Civil rights movement during the early 1950s, King experi enced an intellectual and emo tional crisis himself As a stu dent at the intergrated Crozer Theological Seminary in Ches ter, Pa., King became con vinced that a love for all men must exist in every successful crusade of nonviolent ressist- ance. The combination of exten sively reading the works of many of the world’s greatest Nonviolent methods In the midst of his bewilder ment, King was inspired to read about the life and philoso phy of Mahatma Gandhi. This reading soon restored his ori ginal faith in the power of love. He realized that when love per vades nonviolent methods, it is not a sign of weakness, but it is a potent force for social trans formation. From this point on, God, Gan dhi and a love for mankind were the driving forces in King’s march toward freedom. In a sermon at The Riverside Church in 1967, King said, “We will return good for evil. We will love our enemies. Christ showed us the way and Gandhi showed us it could work.” Before graduating in 1951 as class valedictorian King stu dies and critiqued the writings of Carl Marx, Anders Nygren, Henry David Thoreau and Paul Tillich. He also did extensive studies on pacifism and mean ings of the three Greek words for love: eros, philia and agage. boycott of the city bus system was in order. The boycott even tually lead to the Supreme Court ruling that segregation of buses was unconstitutional. The Rev. Ralph Abernathy and King were two of the first peo ple Nixon approached with the idea. The Montgomery Im provement Association (MIA) was the product of their deli berations. At 3 p.m. on Dec. 5,1955, King was appointed the head of the MIA by Abernathy, Nixon and other community leaders. By 7 p.m. that night, he aroused a crowd of more than 4,000 with an unrehearsed speech. Few, if any one, realized that they were witnessing the beginning of an era that would open the eyes of millions to the injus tices caused by segregation. It was an era that would watch him win the Nobel Peace Prize, form the Southern Christian Leadership Confer ence, write half dozen books, and deliver many inspirational speeches, that would be the driving force behind a national civil rights movement. The most memorable of his speeches was given before more than 250,000 people on Aug. 28,1963 at the Washington monument his famous, “I Have a Dream” speech. He stated in his speech that: “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by their character." He closed by saying: “When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every tenement and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old spiritual. Free at last, Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last’’ Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Power of love When King began his doctor- atal study at Boston University in 1951, he had laid the founda tion of his philosophy of the power of love for mankind, just as the foundations of the civil rights movement had been laid. In January of 1954, Dr. King and his new wife Cloretta Scott King traveled to Montgomery Ala., where he had just been hired as the pastor of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church. It was the same year that the U.S. Sup reme Court banned segrega tion in public schools. The following year witnessed the next major step of the civil Learn how to locate summer, part-time and full-time jobs... COE 210 Cooperative Education a Job Search Strategies A one credit hour course for Senior, Junior and Sophomore level students. (( philosophers and authors, and rights movements. Religious, his religious background all political and community lead- shaoed his beliefs and philo- ers of Montgomery rallied in sophies. Martin Luther King Jr. Inspired by God, Love, Gandhi Friedrich Nietzsche s critic ism of Christian ethics in the support of Mrs. Rosa Parks, Mrs. Parks, a black woman, had been jailed because she re fused to sit in the back of a city bus. Ed Nixon, a respected leader in the compiuiiity,,decided a Registration remains open for this course through March 12, 1985. For more information stop by 113 Alamance