America remains a work-in-progress
America is an idea founded on ideals of equality and freedom. Democracy always requires our work.
America is an idea founded on ideals of equality and freedom. Democracy always requires our work.
Music of hope and resistance for the Martin Luther King, Jr. weekend.
No external force can destroy a people if it does not first win a victory over the spirit.
Desmond Tutu: “If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of the oppressor.”
Richie Havens, Mavis Staples, & Rhiannon Giddens build our resolve on the weekend we honor MLK.
As we celebrate the life and work of The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. this weekend, we are reminded of how far we’ve come in terms of racial justice and equality in America. And—this year more than most—we are also reminded of how so very far we’ve yet to go. In honor of the work of Dr. King, I quoted author Michael Eric Dyson in 2019 from his book Tears We Cannot Stop: A Sermon to White America, where Dyson argues of Martin Luther King, Jr. that America has “washed the grit from his rhetoric” in order to get to a place where he can be seen and admired by the country at large. Yet it was King who said that the country’s race problem “grows out of the…need that some people have to feel superior. A need that some people have to feel…that their white skin ordained them to be first.” Difficult words for many to hear, yet, “This is why King is so important to this generation, to this time, to this …