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Martin Luther King Jr.
One
of the most visible advocates of nonviolence and direct
action as methods of social change, Martin Luther King,
Jr. was born in Atlanta on 15 January 1929. As the
grandson of the Rev. A.D. Williams, pastor of Ebenezer
Baptist church and a founder of Atlanta's NAACP chapter,
and the son of Martin Luther King, Sr., who succeeded
Williams as Ebenezer's pastor, King's roots were in the
African-American Baptist church. After attending
Morehouse College in Atlanta, King went on to study at
Crozer Theological Seminary in Pennsylvania and Boston
University, where he deepened his understanding of
theological scholarship and explored Mahatma Gandhi's
nonviolent strategy for social change.
King married
Coretta Scott in 1953, and the following year he
accepted the pastorate at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church
in Montgomery, Alabama. King received his Ph.D. in
systematic theology in 1955.
On 5 December 1955, after civil rights activist Rosa
Parks refused to comply with Montgomery's segregation
policy on buses, black residents launched a bus boycott
and elected King president of the newly-formed
Montgomery Improvement Association. The boycott
continued throughout 1956 and King gained national
prominence for his role in the campaign. In December
1956 the United States Supreme Court declared Alabama's
segregation laws unconstitutional and Montgomery buses
were desegregated.
Seeking to build upon the success in Montgomery, King
and other southern black ministers founded the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 1957. In 1959,
King toured India and further developed his
understanding of Gandhian nonviolent strategies. Later
that year, King resigned from Dexter and returned to
Atlanta to become co-pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church
with his father.
In 1960, black college students initiated a wave of
sit-in protests that led to the formation of the Student
Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). King supported
the student movement and expressed an interest in
creating a youth arm of the SCLC. Student activists
admired King, but they were critical of his top-down
leadership style and were determined to maintain their
autonomy. As an advisor to SNCC, Ella Baker, who had
previously served as associate director of SCLC, made
clear to representatives from other civil rights
organizations that SNCC was to remain a student-led
organization. The 1961 "Freedom Rides" heightened
tensions between King and younger activists, as he faced
criticism for his decision not to participate in the
rides. Conflicts between SCLC and SNCC continued during
the Albany Movement of 1961 and 1962.
In the spring of 1963, King and SCLC lead mass
demonstrations in Birmingham, Alabama, where local white
police officials were known for their violent opposition
to integration. Clashes between unarmed black
demonstrators and police armed with dogs and fire hoses
generated newspaper headlines throughout the world.
President Kennedy responded to the Birmingham protests
by submitting broad civil rights legislation to
Congress, which led to the passage of the Civil Rights
Act of 1964. Subsequent mass demonstrations culminated
in the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on 28
August 1963, in which more than 250,000 protesters
gathered in Washington, D. C. It was on the steps of the
Lincoln Memorial that King delivered his famous "I Have
a Dream" speech.
King's renown continued to grow as he became Time
magazine's Man of the Year in 1963 and the recipient of
the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. However, along with the
fame and accolades came conflict within the movement's
leadership. Malcolm X's message of self-defense and
black nationalism resonated with northern, urban blacks
more effectively than King's call for nonviolence; King
also faced public criticism from "Black Power"
proponent, Stokely Carmichael.
King's efficacy was not only hindered by divisions
among black leadership, but also by the increasing
resistance he encountered from national political
leaders. FBI director J. Edgar Hoover's extensive
efforts to undermine King's leadership were intensified
during 1967 as urban racial violence escalated, and
King's public criticism of U.S. intervention in the
Vietnam War led to strained relations with Lyndon
Johnson's administration.
In late 1967, King initiated a Poor People's Campaign
designed to confront economic problems that had not been
addressed by earlier civil rights reforms. The following
year, while supporting striking sanitation workers in
Memphis, he delivered his final address "I've Been to
the Mountaintop." The next day, 4 April 1968, King was
assassinated.
To this day, King remains a controversial symbol of
the African-American civil rights struggle, revered by
many for his martyrdom on behalf of nonviolence and
condemned by others for his militancy and insurgent
views.
© Martin Luther King, Jr. Institute at
Stanford University |