Josephâs speech reminded students that even in light of President Barack Obamaâs second term in office, the movement for equality for all races is still going strong.
Joseph calls the years 1954 through 1965 the heroic period of the civil rights movement, when Dr. King led demonstrations across the country. He gave a snapshot of events in that era, such as the murder of Emmett Till, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, Kingâs âI Have a Dreamâ speech, and the signing of the Voting Rights and Civil Rights acts.
In Kingâs letter from the Birmingham jail in 1963, the leader responded to critics who called his actions âunwise and untimelyâ by saying the time to act is now. Joseph said Kingâs point was the civil rights movement was about transforming the scope of American democracy.
âThe founding fathers wouldâve never predicted Barack Obama,â Joseph said.
Joseph said people see King as a prince of peace, rather than a revolutionary who spent three years before his death speaking against the governmentâs policies concerning the Vietnam War and poverty in America.
âHe wasnât very popular during this period,â Joseph said. âIt takes courage to speak truth to power.â
Joseph called King a revolutionary who âutilized non-violence to coerce and transform politics and practices even when leaders and politicians and citizens said, âYou shouldnât be doing this, you should take it slow.ââ
Obama and King shouldnât be confused in history, Joseph said, because one is a politician and the other was a civil rights activist and community organizer.
If Dr. King were alive today, he would âspeak truth to power and criticize the President for drone attacksâ and poverty, Joseph said, even when itâs not popular to do so.
Joseph said King wasnât a very popular American by the time he died, but said America later revitalized his story and kept his revolutionary side âat an armâs length distance.â
âWe want the neatly wrapped up story with a beginning, middle and end, so we say that Barack Obamaâs election is the end of our civil rights era,â Joseph said.
Joseph said thatâs not the case, and the movement is still going strong with victories and setbacks along the way.
âThe hope is in the continual struggle,â Joseph said.
About the Author
