Southern Cultures
Volume 9, Number 2, Summer 2003
E-ISSN: 1534-1488 Print ISSN: 1068-8218
DOI: 10.1353/scu.2003.0026
E-ISSN: 1534-1488 Print ISSN: 1068-8218
DOI: 10.1353/scu.2003.0026
Luker, Ralph.
Quoting, Merging, and Sampling the Dream: Martin Luther King and Vernon Johns
Southern Cultures - Volume 9, Number 2, Summer 2003, pp. 28-48
The University of North Carolina Press
Ralph Luker - Quoting, Merging, and Sampling the Dream: Martin Luther
King and Vernon Johns - Southern Cultures 9:2 Southern Cultures 9.2
(2003) 28-48 Quoting, Merging, and Sampling the
Dream Martin Luther King and Vernon Johns Ralph E. Luker [Figures] . .
. until justice rolls down like waters and righteousness like a mighty
stream. --Martin Luther King Jr. Near the end of the exhilarating day
of December 5, 1955, Martin Luther King Jr. stepped into the pulpit of
Montgomery, Alabama's Holt Street Baptist Church. With seven years of
preaching behind him and "only twenty minutes to prepare the most
decisive speech of my life," the twenty-six-year-old pastor of the
city's Dexter Avenue Baptist Church had to outline the grievances of
his people, justify their refusal to ride on Montgomery's city busses
any longer, and encourage them in peaceful fortitude. In his speech
that evening, the preacher recalled a single line of poetry. "Right
here in Montgomery," he said, "when the history books are written in
the future (yes), somebody will have to say, 'There lived a race of
people (well), a black people (yes sir), "fleecy locks and black
complexion" (yes), a people who had the moral courage to stand up for
their rights. [Applause] And thereby they injected a new meaning into
the veins of history and of civilization.'" Nearly fifty years later,
Rosa Parks still recalled those "prophetic words" as defining "the
character of our nonviolent freedom struggle."...