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- <text id=93HT1310>
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- <link 93XP0455>
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- <title>
- King: Never Again Where He Was
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--King Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 3, 1964
- Man of the Year
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Never Again Where He Was
- </p>
- <p> The jetliner left Atlanta and raced through the night toward
- Los Angeles. From his window seat, the black man gazed down at
- the shadowed outlines of the Appalachians, then leaned back
- against a white pillow. In the dimmed cabin light, his dark,
- impassive face seemed enlivened only by his big, shiny,
- compelling eyes. Suddenly, the plane shuddered in a pocket of
- severe turbulence. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. turned a wisp
- of a smile to his companion and said: "I guess that's Birmingham
- down below."
- </p>
- <p> It was, and the reminder of Vulcan's city set King to
- talking quietly of the events of 1963. "In 1963," he said, there
- arose a great Negro disappointment and disillusionment and
- discontent. It was the year of Birmingham, when the civil rights
- issue was impressed on the nation in a way that nothing else
- before had been able to do. It was the most decisive year in the
- Negro's fight for equality. Never before had there been such a
- coalition of conscience on this issue."
- </p>
- <p> Symbol of Revolution. In 1963, the centennial of the
- Emancipation Proclamation, that coalition of conscience
- insatiably changed the course of U.S. life. Nineteen million
- Negro citizens forced the nation to take stock of itself in the
- Congress as in the corporation, in factory and field and pulpit
- and playground, in kitchen and classroom. The U.S. Negro,
- shedding the thousand fears that have encumbered his generations,
- made 1963 the year of his outcry for quality, of massive
- demonstrations, of wins and speeches and street fighting, of soul
- searching in the suburbs and psalm singing in the jail cells.
- </p>
- <p> And there was Birmingham with its bombs and snarling dogs;
- its shots in the night and death in the streets and in the
- churches; its lashing fire hoses that washed human beings along
- slippery avenues without washing away the dignity; its men and
- women pinned to the ground by officers of the law...this was
- the Negro revolution. Birmingham was its main battleground, and
- Martin Luther King Jr., the leader of the Negroes in Birmingham,
- became millions, black and white, in South and North, the symbol
- of that revolution--and the Man of the Year.
- </p>
- <p> King is in many ways the unlikely leader of an unlikely
- organization--the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, a
- loose alliance of 100 or so church-oriented groups. King has
- neither the quiet brilliance nor the sharp administrative
- capabilities of the N.A.A.C.P.'s Roy Wilkins. He has none of the
- sophistication of the National Urban League's Whitney Young Jr.,
- lacks Young's experience in dealing with high echelons of the
- U.S. business community. He has neither the inventiveness of
- CORE's James Farmer nor the raw militancy of SNICK's John Lewis
- nor the bristling wit of Author James Baldwin. He did not make
- his mark in the entertainment field, where talented Negroes have
- long been prominent, or in the sciences and professions where
- Negroes have, almost unnoticed, been coming into their own. He
- earns no more money than some plumbers ($10,000 a year), and
- possesses little in the way of material things.
- </p>
- <p> He presents an unimposing figure: he is 5 ft. 7 in., weighs
- a heavy-chested 173 lbs., dresses with funereal conservatism
- (five of six suits are black, as are most of his neckties). He
- has very little sense of humor. He never heard of Y.A. Tittle or
- George Shearing, but he can discourse by the hour about Thoreau,
- Hegel, Kant and Gandhi.
- </p>
- <p> King preaches endlessly about nonviolence, but his protest
- movements often lead to violence. He himself has been stabbed in
- the chest, and physically attacked three more times; his home has
- been bombed three times, and he has been pitched into jail 14
- times. His mail brings him a daily dosage of opinion in which he
- is by turn vilified and glorified. One letter says: "This isn't a
- threat but a promise--your head will be blown off as sure as
- Christ made green apples." But another ecstatically calls him a
- "Moses, sent to lead his people to the Promised Land of first-
- class citizenship."
- </p>
- <p> Cadence. Some cynics call King "De Lawd." He does have an
- upper-air way about him, and, for a man who has earned fame with
- speeches, his metaphors can be downright embarrassing. For
- Negroes, he says, "the word 'wait' has been a tranquilizing
- Thalidomide," giving "birth to an ill-formed infant of
- frustration." Only by "following the cause of tender-heartedness"
- can man "matriculate into the university of eternal life."
- Segregation is "the adultery of an illicit intercourse between
- injustice and immorality," and it "cannot be cured by the
- Vaseline of gradualism."
- </p>
- <p> Yet when he mounts the platform or pulpit, the actual words
- seem unimportant. And King, by some quality of that limpid voice
- or by some secret of cadence, exercises control as can few others
- over his audiences, black or white. He has proved this ability on
- countless occasions, ranging from the Negroes' huge summer March
- on Washington to a little meeting one recent Friday night in
- Gadsden, Ala. There, the exchange went like this:
- </p>
- <p> King: I hear they are beating you!
- </p>
- <p> Response: Yes, yes.
- </p>
- <p> King: I hear they are cursing you.
- </p>
- <p> Response: Yes, yes.
- </p>
- <p> King: I hear they are going into your homes and doing nasty
- things and beating you!
- </p>
- <p> Response: Yes, yes.
- </p>
- <p> King: Some of you have knives, and I ask you to put them up.
- Some of you may have arms, and I ask you to put them up. Get the
- weapon of nonviolence, the breastplate of righteousness, the
- armor of truth, and just keep marching.
- </p>
- <p> Few can explain the extraordinary King mystique. Yet he has
- an indescribable capacity for empathy that is the touchstone of
- leadership. By deed and by preachment, he has stirred in his
- people a Christian forbearance that nourishes hope and smothers
- injustice. Says Atlanta's Negro Minister Ralph D. Abernathy, whom
- King calls "my dearest friend and cellmate": "The people make Dr.
- King great. He articulates the longings, the hopes, the
- aspirations of his people in a most earnest and profound manner.
- He is a humble man, down to earth, honest. He has proved his
- commitment to Judaeo-Christian ideals. He seeks to save the
- nation and its soul, not just the Negro."
- </p>
- <p> Angry Memories. Whatever his greatness, it was thrust upon
- him. He was born on Jan. 15 nearly 35 years ago, at a time when
- the myth of the subhuman Negro flourished, and when as cultivated
- an observer as H.L. Mencken could write that "the educated Negro
- of today is a failure, not because he meets insuperable
- difficulties in life, but because he is a Negro. His brain is not
- fitted for the higher forms of mental effort; his ideals, no
- matter how laboriously he is trained and sheltered, remain those
- of a clown."
- </p>
- <p> Mencken had never met the King family of Atlanta. King's
- maternal grandfather, the Rev. A.D. Williams, was one of Georgia's
- first N.A.A.C.P. leaders, helped organize a boycott against an
- Atlanta newspaper that had disparaged Negro voters. His preacher
- father was in the forefront of civil rights battles aimed at
- securing equal salaries for Negro teachers and the abolition of
- Jim Crow elevators in the Atlanta courthouse.
- </p>
- <p> As a boy, Martin Luther King Jr. suffered those cumulative
- experiences in discrimination that demoralize and outrage human
- dignity. He still recalls the curtains that were used on the
- dining cars of trains to separate white from black. "I was very
- young when I had my first experience in sitting behind the
- curtain," he says. "I felt just as if a curtain had come down
- across my whole life. The insult of it I will never forget." On
- another occasion, he and his schoolteacher were riding a bus from
- Macon to Atlanta when the driver ordered them to give up their
- seats to white passengers. "When we didn't move right away, the
- driver started cursing us out and calling us black sons of
- bitches. I decided not to move at all, but my teacher pointed out
- that we must obey the law. So we got up and stood in the aisle
- the whole 90 miles to Atlanta. It was a night I'll never forget.
- I don't think I have ever been so deeply angry in my life."
- </p>
- <p> Ideals & Technique. Raised in the warmth of a tightly knit
- family, King developed from his earliest years a raw-nerved
- sensitivity that bordered on self-destruction. Twice, before he
- was 13, he tried to commit suicide. Once his brother, "A.D.,"
- accidentally knocked his grandmother unconscious when he slid
- down a banister. Martin thought she was dead, and in despair ran
- to a second-floor window and jumped out--only to land unhurt.
- He did the same thing, with the same result, on the day his
- grandmother died.
- </p>
- <p> A bright student, he skipped through high school and at 15
- entered Atlanta's Negro Morehouse College. His father wanted him
- to study for the ministry. King himself thought he wanted
- medicine or the law. "I had doubts that religion was
- intellectually respectable. I revolted against the emotionalism
- of Negro religion, the shouting and the stamping. I didn't
- understand it and it embarrassed me." At Morehouse, King searched
- for "some intellectual basis for a social philosophy." He read
- and reread Thoreau's essay, "Civil Disobedience," concluded that
- the ministry was the only framework in which he could properly
- position his growing ideas on social protest.
- </p>
- <p> At Crozer Theological Seminary in Chester, Pa., King built
- the underpinnings of his philosophy. Hegel and Kant impressed
- him, but a lecture on Gandhi transported him, sent him foraging
- insatiably into Gandhi's books. "From my background," he says, "I
- gained my regulating Christian ideals. From Gandhi I learned my
- operational technique."
- </p>
- <p> Montgomery. The first big test of King's philosophy--or of
- his operating technique--came in 1955, after he had married a
- talented young soprano named Coretta Scott and accepted the
- pastorate of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Ala.
- </p>
- <p> On Dec. 1 of that year, a seamstress named Rosa Parks
- boarded a Montgomery bus and took a seat. As the bus continued
- along its route, picking up more passengers, the Negroes aboard
- rose on the driver's orders to give their seats to white people.
- When the driver told Mrs. Parks to get up, she refused. "I don't
- really know why I wouldn't move," she said later. "There was no
- plot or plan at all. I was just tired from shopping. My feet
- hurt." She was arrested and fined $10.
- </p>
- <p> For some reason, that small incident triggered the
- frustrations of Montgomery's Negroes, who for years had bent
- subserviently beneath the prejudices of the white community.
- Within hours, the Negroes were embarked upon a bus boycott that
- was more than 99% effective, almost ruined Montgomery's bus line.
- The boycott committee soon became the Montgomery Improvement
- Association, with Martin Luther King Jr. as president. His
- leadership was more inspirational than administrative; he is, as
- an observer says, "more at home with a conception than he is with
- the details of its application." King's home was bombed, and when
- his enraged people seemed ready to take to the streets in a riot
- of protest, he controlled them with his calm preaching of
- nonviolence. King became world famous and in less than a year the
- Supreme Court upheld an earlier order forbidding Jim Crow seating
- in Alabama buses.
- </p>
- <p> Albany. Montgomery was one of the first great battles won by
- the Negro in the South, and for a while after it was won
- everything seemed anticlimactic to King. When the sit-ins and
- freedom-ride movements gained momentum, King's S.C.L.C. helped
- organize and support them. But King somehow did not seem very
- efficient, and his apparent luck of imagination was to bring him
- to his lowest ebb in the Negro movement.
- </p>
- <p> In December 1961, King joined a mass protest demonstration
- in Albany, Ga., was arrested, and dramatically declared that he
- would stay in jail until Albany consented to desegregate its
- public facilities. But just two days after his arrest, King came
- out on bail. The Albany movement collapsed, and King was bitterly
- criticized for helping to kill it. Today he admits mistakes in
- Albany.
- </p>
- <p> "Looking back over it," he says, "I'm sorry I was bailed
- out. I didn't understand at the time what was happening. We
- though that the victory had been won. When we got out, we
- discovered it was all a hoax. We had lost a real opportunity to
- redo Albany, and we lost an initiative that we never regained."
- </p>
- <p> But King also learned a lesson in Albany. "We attacked the
- political power structure instead of the economic power
- structure," he says. "You don't win against a political power
- structure where you don't have the votes. But you can win against
- an economic power structure when you have the economic power to
- make the difference between a merchant's profit and loss."
- </p>
- <p> Birmingham. It was while he was in his post-Albany eclipse
- that King began planning for his most massive assault on the
- barricades of segregation. The target: Birmingham, citadel of
- blind, die-hard segregation. King's lieutenant, Wyatt Tee Walker,
- has explained the theory that governs King's planning: "We've got
- to have a crisis to bargain with. To take a moderate approach,
- hoping to get white help, doesn't work. They nail you to the
- cross, and it saps the enthusiasm of the followers. You've got to
- have a crisis."
- </p>
- <p> The Negroes made their crisis, but it was no spur-of-the-
- moment matter. King himself went to Birmingham to conduct
- workshops in nonviolent techniques. He recruited 200 people who
- were willing to go to jail for the cause, carefully planned his
- strategy in ten meetings with local Negro leaders. Then,
- declaring that Birmingham is the "most thoroughly segregated big
- city in the U.S.," he announced early in 1963 that he would lead
- demonstrations there until "Pharaoh lets God's People go."
- </p>
- <p> Awaiting King in Birmingham was Public Safety Commissioner
- Theophilus Eugene ("Bull") Connor, a man who was to become a
- symbol of police brutality yet who, in fact, merely reflected the
- seething hatreds in a city where acts of violence were as common
- as chitlins and ham hocks. As it happened, Bull Connor was
- running for mayor against a relative moderate, Albert Boutwell.
- To avoid giving campaign fuel to Connor, King waited until after
- the April 2 election. Between Jan. 16 and March 29, he launched
- himself into a whirlwind speaking tour, made 28 speeches in 16
- cities across the nation.
- </p>
- <p> Moving into Birmingham in the first week of April, King and
- his group began putting their plans to work. Bull Connor, who had
- lost the election but refused to relinquish power, sent his spies
- into the Negro community to seek information. Fearing that their
- phones were tapped, King and his friends worked up a code; he
- became "J.F.K.," Ralph Abernathy "Dean Rusk," Birmingham Preacher
- Fred Shuttlesworth "Bull," and Negro Businessman John Drew "Pope
- John." Demonstrators were called "baptismal candidates," and the
- whole operation was labeled "Project C"--for "Confrontation."
- </p>
- <p> The protest began. Day after day, Negro men, women and
- children in their Sunday best paraded cheerfully downtown to be
- hauled off to jail for demonstrating. The sight and sound of so
- many people filling his jail so triumphantly made Bull Connor
- nearly apoplectic. He arrested them at lunch counters and in the
- streets, wherever they gathered. Still they cam, rank on rank. At
- length, on Tuesday, May 7, 2,500 Negroes poured out of church,
- surged through the police lines and swarmed downtown. Connor
- furiously ordered the fire hoses turned on. Armed with clubs,
- cops beat their way into the crowds. An armored car menacingly
- bulldozed the milling throngs. Fire hoses swept them down the
- streets. In all, the Birmingham demonstrations resulted in the
- jailing of more than 3,300 Negroes, including King himself.
- </p>
- <p> The Response. The Negroes had created their crisis--and
- Connor had made it a success. "The civil rights movement," said
- President Kennedy in a meeting later with King, "owes Bull Connor
- as much as it owes Abraham Lincoln." that was at best an
- oversimplification; nevertheless, because of Connor, the riots
- seared the front pages of the world press, outraged millions of
- people. Everywhere, King's presence, in the pulpit or at rallies,
- was demanded. But while he preached nonviolence, violence spread.
- "Freedom Walker" William Moore was shot and killed in Alabama.
- Mississippi's N.A.A.C.P. Leader Medgar Evers was assassinated
- outside his home. There was violence in Jackson, Miss., in
- Cambridge, Md., in Danville, Va. In Birmingham, later in the
- year, a church bombing killed four Negro Sunday-school children,
- while two other youngsters were shot and killed the same day.
- </p>
- <p> Those events awakened long-slumbering Negro resentments,
- from which a fresh Negro urgency drew strength. For the first
- time, a unanimity of purpose slammed into the Negro consciousness
- with the force of a fire hose. Class lines began to shatter.
- Middle-class Negroes, who were aspiring for acceptance by the
- white community, suddenly found a point of identity with Negroes
- at the bottom of the economic heap. Many wealthy Negroes, once
- reluctant to join the fight, pitched in.
- </p>
- <p> Now sit-in campaigns and demonstrations erupted like
- machine-gun fire in every major city in the North, as well as in
- hundreds of new places in the South. Negroes demanded better job
- opportunities, an end to the de facto school segregation that
- ghetto life had forced upon them. The N.A.A.C.P.'s Roy Wilkins,
- a calm, cool civil rights leader, lost some of his calmness and
- coolness. Said he: "My objectivity went out the window when I saw
- the picture of those cops sitting on that woman and holding her
- down by the throat." Wilkins promptly joined a street
- demonstration, got himself arrested.
- </p>
- <p> "Free at Last." Many whites also began to participate,
- particularly the white clergy, which cast off its lethargy as
- ministers, priests and rabbis tucked the Scriptures under their
- arms and marched to jails with Negroes whom they had never seen
- before. The Rev. Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, executive head of the
- United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., declared: "Some time or
- other, we are all going to have to stand and be on the receiving
- end of a fire hose." Blake thereupon joined two dozen other
- clergymen in a protest march--and was arrested.
- </p>
- <p> In the months following Birmingham, Negroes paraded,
- demonstrated, sat in, stormed and fought through civil rights
- sorties in 800 cities and towns in the land. The revolt's basic
- and startling new assumption--that the black man can read and
- understand the Constitution, and can demand his equal rights
- without fear--was not lost on Washington. President Kennedy,
- who had been in no great hurry to produce a civil rights bill,
- now moved swiftly. The Justice Department drew up a tight and
- tough bill, aimed particularly at voting rights, employment, and
- the end of segregation in public facilities.
- </p>
- <p> To cap the summer's great storm of protest, the Negro
- leaders sponsored the now famous March on Washington. It was a
- remarkable spectacle, one of disorganized order, with a
- stateliness that no amount of planning could have produced. Some
- 200,000 strong, whites and blacks of all ages walked from the
- Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial. There, the Negro
- leaders spoke--Wilkins, A. Philip Randolph, Young and SNICK's
- Lewis.
- </p>
- <p> But it was King who most dramatically articulated the
- Negro's grievances, and it was he whom those present, as well as
- millions who watched on television, would remember longest. "When
- we let freedom ring," he cried, "when we let it ring from every
- village 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 Negro spiritual,
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l> "Free at last,</l>
- <l> Free at last.</l>
- <l> Thank God Almighty,</l>
- <l> We are free at last."</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Even the Unions. The march made irreversible all that had
- gone before in the year of the Negro revolution. In that year,
- the Negroes made more gains than they had achieved in any year
- since the end of the Civil War. A speedup in school integration
- in the South brought to 1,141 the number of desegregated school
- districts. In the North, city after city re-examined de facto
- school segregation and set up plans to redress the balance. In
- 300 cities in the South, public facilities--from swimming pools
- to restaurants--were integrated, and in scores of cities across
- the nation, leaders established biracial committees as a start
- toward resolving local inequities.
- </p>
- <p> New job opportunities opened nearly everywhere, as the
- nation's businesses sent out calls for qualified Negro help--and, finding a shortage, began training programs for unskilled
- Negroes. Banks, supermarkets, hotels and department stores
- upgraded Negro employees. In Philadelphia, Cleveland and New
- York, pressure on the A.F.L.-C.I.O construction unions--the
- most notorious Jim Crow organizations in the North--produced
- progress toward training of Negro apprentices. San Francisco's
- tile setters, Memphis' rubber workers and St. Louis' bricklayers
- opened their union rolls to willing beginners. Television and
- Madison Avenue blossomed with Negro actors and ad models in "non-
- Negro" roles. In Denver, Sears, Roebuck & Co., which hitherto had
- had one Negro employee (dusting shelves), hired 19 more Negroes
- for a variety of jobs. To varying degrees it was the same way in
- Houston, at Grant's five and ten, and in San Francisco, where
- Tidewater Oil took on a Negro for executive training. Even in the
- South, the job situation improved. Negroes began moving into
- professional positions in North Carolina's state government.
- Three Nashville banks agreed to hire Negroes in clerical
- positions, and some white-collar jobs opened in South Carolina.
- </p>
- <p> Still, for every tortuous inch gained, there are miles of
- progress left to be covered. There remain 1,888 Southern school
- districts where segregation is the rule--and scores of other
- districts where desegregation sits uneasily in token form.
- Though Montgomery buses are technically integrated, the city's
- other public facilities still are not. Team sports are still
- carefully segregated in a large number of Southern institutions;
- the NBC television network recently canceled coverage of the
- annual Blue-Gray football game because Negroes are not eligible
- to participate. Only 22 states have enforceable fair-employment
- laws on the books. And not counting Mississippi, where there is a
- total absence of integrated public facilities, those in other
- Southern states are so spotty and inconsistent (a downtown lunch
- counter, yes; the city swimming pool, no) that it is hard for a
- Negro nowadays to know where he may go and where he may not.
- </p>
- <p> Backlash. In general, housing is still the Negro's toughest
- barrier. Here and there--for example, in Denver's Park Hill
- residential section, where Negro home buying at first created
- flurries of panic--colored families have been able to move into
- white sections with little trouble. But the major metropolitan
- areas of Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, Washington and Los
- Angeles continue to fill up at the heart with Negroes while
- whites form a suburban collar on the outside. California used to
- pride itself on its progressive attitude, and boasts a fair-
- housing law on the books to prove it. Now it has been struck with
- a campaign by the 40,000-member California Real Estate
- Association to nullify the law.
- </p>
- <p> The white counterattack in California reflects one natural
- consequence of the Negro's militant position: a backlash
- reaction, derived from the notion that "the Negro is pushing too
- far, too fast," and that he is also threatening the unskilled
- white man's job security. James P. Mitchell, Eisenhower's onetime
- Labor Secretary, now San Francisco's human-relations coordinator
- and a friend of the Negro feels that "militancy could quite
- easily antagonize important people who are now prepared or
- preparing to do something. What Negroes have to remember is
- something they tend to forget: that they are a minority, and that
- they can only achieve what they want with the support of the
- majority." Says Los Angeles Housewife Maureen Hartman: "I don't
- see why the Negroes are weeping and wailing. This is not
- Birmingham. They can go anywhere. They can vote, hold good jobs,
- eat in the best restaurants. Just what do they expect from us?"
- </p>
- <p> Re-examination. What the Negroes expect, and what they are
- getting to a degree that would have been astonishing at the start
- of 1963, is a change of attitude. "A lot of people," says
- Chicago's Negro Baptist Minister Arthur Brazier, "are
- re-examining their motives. Even if this means that a lot of
- hidden prejudices have been uncovered in Northerners, good will
- be gained from the fact that Americans have been forced to act on
- days other than Brotherhood Days and Weeks."
- </p>
- <p> Often the changes in attitudes are tiny in scope but broad
- in meaning. No longer do the starters at Miami's municipal golf
- courses ask a trio of white men if they will accept a Negro
- fourth; they merely assign the Negro, and foursome heads onto the
- course. A New York adoption agency is asking white families to
- take Negro children. Louise Morgan, a former Chicago advertising
- executive, says: "I had conned myself into thinking I was a
- liberal. The rude awakening occurred less than a year ago, when a
- Negro writer and his family sought an apartment in my building
- and were turned down. I had met him. He was bright and a
- gentleman. Yet I didn't lift a finger to help him. That's all
- changed now." In California, Real Estate Dealer Richard S.
- Hallmark quit his job in protest over the commonly accepted
- methods of restricting Negro house buying. "I had never sold to a
- Negro family in my life, but it grated on my conscience," he
- says. "I'm tired of people telling me they don't give a goddam
- about the law and that they're just not going to sell or rent to
- 'niggers.' I'm not a martyr or a crusader, but they made me
- ashamed. The colored people are here to stay, so we might as well
- get used to it."
- </p>
- <p> In addition to marching in demonstrations, clergymen are
- welcoming Negroes to their all-white congregations in many
- places, and are mounting mail campaigns to Congress in support of
- the civil rights bill. Several Roman Catholic archdioceses now
- require a specific number of sermons on race relations. The
- National Council of Churches has budgeted $300,000 to support
- civil rights activities.
- </p>
- <p> A Different Image. The most striking aspect of the revolt,
- however, is the change in Negroes themselves. The Invisible Man
- has now become plainly visible--in bars, restaurants, boards of
- education, city commissions, civic committees, theaters and mixed
- social activities, as well as in jobs. Says Mississippi's
- N.A.A.C.P. President Aaron Henry: "There has been a re-evaluation
- of our slave philosophy that permitted us to be satisfied with
- the leftovers at the back door rather than demand a full serving
- at the family dinner table." With this has come a new pride in
- race. Explains Dr. John R. Larkins, a Negro consultant in North
- Carolina's Department of Public Welfare: "Negroes have a feeling
- of self-respect that I've never seen in all my life. They are
- more sophisticated now. They have begun to think, to form
- positive opinions of themselves. There's none of that defeatism.
- the American Negro has a different image of himself." Moreover,
- says U.C.L.A.'s Negro Psychiatrist J. Alfred Cannon, "We've got
- to look within ourselves for some of the answers. We must be able
- to identify with ourselves as Negroes. Most Negro crimes of
- violence are directed against other Negroes; it's a way of
- expressing the Negro's self-hatred. Nonviolent demonstrations are
- a healthy way of channeling these feelings. But they won't be
- effective unless the Negro accepts his own identity."
- </p>
- <p> Where most Negroes once deliberately ignored their African
- beginnings and looked down on the blacks of that continent, many
- now identify strongly with Africa--though not to the point
- where they would repudiate their American loyalties--and take
- pride in the emergence of the new nations there. Some Negro women
- are affecting African-style hairdos; Negroes are decorating their
- homes with paintings and sculpture that reflect interest in
- African culture. There has been a decline in sales of "whitening"
- creams, hair straighteners and pomades, which for years found a
- big market among Negroes obsessed with ridding themselves of
- their racial identity.
- </p>
- <p> The Lull. There has been an inevitable lull in visible civil
- rights activity since the March on Washington, and this has
- disheartened some Negroes. Says Richard L. Banks, secretary of
- the Governor's advisory committee on civil rights in
- Massachusetts: "When the Negroes are not in the streets any more,
- I'm awfully afraid that some of the people who responded will
- forget it." But the lull is deceptive, and it is probably best
- described by James Baldwin. Says he, "This lull is like a
- football huddle. People are reassessing. They are planning. We
- will flush the villain out."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, most Negro leaders are waiting for the outcome of
- the civil rights still in Congress, and are counseling patience
- until at least the end of this month. They are also carefully
- gauging the position of Lyndon Johnson. So far, the President's
- resolute support of the civil rights bill has been encouraging.
- Says the Rev. L. Sylvester Odom of Denver's African Methodist
- Episcopal Church: "Personally I wouldn't be surprised if
- President Johnson gets more out of Congress than President
- Kennedy could have. He may not get as deeply into the hearts of
- the people, but he may do pretty well with the Congress, and
- after all that is what counts." Decrees Virginia-born Social
- Psychologist Thomas Pettigrew: "Johnson will be tougher with the
- South. He knows them. Kennedy treated the South as if it were
- Boston. As a Southerner, I know damn well you don't treat the
- South that way. Johnson won't play patty-cake with them."
- </p>
- <p> Martin Luther King Jr. has already met with President
- Johnson, and he is similarly optimistic. "I've had a good deal of
- contact with him in the past several years," says King. "He means
- business. I think we can expect even more from him than we have
- had up to now. I have implicit confidence in the man, and unless
- he betrays his past actions, we will proceed on the basis that we
- have in the White House a man who is deeply committed to help
- us."
- </p>
- <p> Thus the support of the President for strong civil rights
- bill provides a basis for high Negro hopes. Though Negro leaders
- acknowledge that laws do not change people's hearts, they want
- the satisfaction of knowing that a federal law support them in,
- for example, their demands for equal voting rights and the right
- to share public accommodations with white men. If the civil
- rights bill circumvents these specifics, or if it should fail to
- pass altogether, the leaders are determined to push their
- revolution all the more strongly in 1964.
- </p>
- <p> The Year Ahead. Some believe that demonstrations may have
- passed their peak of effectiveness. Says Boston N.A.A.C.P. Leader
- Tom Atkins: "One of the problems with these damn demonstrations
- is that you have to keep making them more exciting." But among
- those who do not agree is Martin Luther King Jr., and his
- preparations for 1964 are well under way. "More and more," he
- says, "I have come to feel that our next attack will have to be
- more than just getting a lunch counter integrated or a department
- store to take down discriminatory signs. I feel we will have to
- assault the whole system of segregation in a community."
- </p>
- <p> King's most intensive efforts will be entered on Alabama and
- Mississippi, because there the problem is greatest. "The Negro
- suffers more and more. How to deliver an all-out attack? This is
- what we have to think about. I'm thinking now in terms of
- thousands and thousands of people. They would have to be
- students, mainly because, for financial reasons, working adults
- find it difficult to remain in jail." Very soon King may press an
- offensive in Danville, Va., which, he says, is "the most
- difficult immediate situation we face. The town has a notorious
- record of police brutality. I don't agree that there has to be
- violence in the future, but this will depend on events. For
- instance, if a filibuster in Congress stands in the way of
- meaningful legislation, the Negro could be driven to despair and
- violence."
- </p>
- <p> King's mission is to turn that potential for violence into
- successful, direct, nonviolent action, and he works at the job 20
- hours a day. He has moved back with his wife and four children to
- Atlanta, where he shares the pulpit of the Ebenezer Baptist
- Church with his father. His house, near the church, is an old,
- two-story, four-bedroom place. Paintings with African themes and
- a photograph of Gandhi hang on the walls. There is a threadbare
- scatter rug in the living room, two chairs protected with
- plastic, and a couch in need of a new slip cover. One of the keys
- is missing on the old grand piano. King likes to play the piano,
- although, as his wife says, "he starts off the 'Moonlight Sonata'
- as if you're really going to hear something, but he fades out."
- </p>
- <p> King rises at 6:30 a.m. and goes to his study for 45 minutes
- of reading. Then he has fruit juice and coffee for breakfast, and
- at 9 o'clock drives to his office in one of his two cars (a 1960
- Ford and a 1963 Rambler). There he goes to work in a 16-ft.-
- square room filled with perhaps 200 volumes on Negro and
- religious subjects; he checks his mail (about 70 letters a day),
- writes his speeches and sermons, confers with aides and, by
- telephone, with civil rights leaders around the country. He
- usually eats lunch at his desk, then continues working often
- until 2 or 3 o'clock the next morning.
- </p>
- <p> Redemption. More and more, King spends his time in
- airplanes, journeying to the far corners of the U.S. to speak and
- preach to huge audiences. He traveled about 275,000 miles in 1963
- and made more than 350 speeches. Wherever he goes, the threat of
- death hovers in the form of crackpots. "I just don't worry about
- things like this," he says. "If I did, I just couldn't get
- anything done. One time I did have a gun in Montgomery. I don't
- know why I got it in the first place. I sat down with Coretta one
- night and we talked about it. I pointed out that as a leader of
- a nonviolent movement, I had no right to have a gun, so I got rid
- of it. The quality, not the longevity, of one's life is what is
- important. If you are cut down in a movement that is designed to
- save the soul of a nation, then no other death could be more
- redemptive."
- </p>
- <p> It is with this inner strength, tenaciously rooted in
- Christian concepts, that King has made himself the unchallenged
- voice of the Negro people--and the disquieting conscience of the
- whites. That voice in turn has infused the Negroes themselves
- with the fiber that gives their revolution its true stature. In
- Los Angeles recently, King finished a talk by saying: "I say good
- night to you by quoting the words of an old Negro slave preacher,
- who said, 'We ain't what we ought to be and we ain't what we're
- going to be. But thank God, we ain't what we was.'"
- </p>
- <p> After 1963, with the help of Martin Luther King Jr., the
- Negro will never again be where he was.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-