Remember Dr. King for battling hate against all
For those of us who closely follow the progress in America in the battles against racism and anti-Semitism, the observance of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday this year has particular relevance.
First, the King holiday, which is observed on Monday this year, reminds us of two significant anniversaries surrounding the civil rights leader. It is the 50th anniversary of his historic “I Have A Dream” speech at the Mall on Washington and the 20th anniversary of the first time that all 50 states in the union observed the holiday.
Second, while leading the monumental struggle for civil rights in this country, King never equivocated in denouncing anti-Semitism.
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“The segregationist and racists make no fine distinction between the Negro and the Jews,” he said bluntly.
And in a letter to Jewish leaders just months before his 1968 assassination, King said, “I will continue to oppose it [anti-Semitism] because it is immoral and self-destructive.”
The message – that it is never enough for Jews and Jewish organizations to condemn anti-Semitism – remains terribly important for the country. Important leaders from all communities must follow King’s lead.
More specifically, King’s condemnation of anti-Semitism was and is important for his own African-American community. For too long, levels of anti-Semitic attitudes have been too high. And some African-American cultural figures utter sentiments about Jews and Jewish power that remain very troubling.
Not only did King react against blatant anti-Semitism, but early on he anticipated the more sophisticated versions. In an appearance at Harvard, as reported by the scholar Seymour Martin Lipset in his book “The Socialism of Fools,” King responded to a hostile question about Zionism, “When people criticize Zionists they mean Jews; you are talking anti-Semitism.”
Third, King understood the importance of standing up for other minorities, both as a value and to strengthen support for his work on behalf of African Americans. Perhaps King’s greatest legacy was his conviction that justice for black people could not be achieved in a vacuum, that all Americans must live free from oppression in order to guarantee freedom.
Why was obtaining civil rights for African Americans so important to the American Jewish community? Because it was the right thing to do, and because it was good for all and built coalitions in fighting all forms of prejudice.
Fourth, King knew that power politics were important to bring change. Speeches, marches, demonstrations and sit-ins were all about power politics. But he profoundly understood that in the end, appealing to the moral values, the goodness, and the long-term interests of those who needed to change – that is, appealing to the white majority – was the key to changing society.
In the long run, changing hearts and minds through education and appealing to the best instincts of America is the real solution.
Fifth, the civil rights revolution led by King also further opened up America for Jews and is one of the key reasons why today American Jews are the freest community in the 2,000-year history of the diaspora, and why things are so much better for Jews today than they were 60 or 70 years ago. Civil rights legislation allowed Jews to challenge their exclusion. Even more, the revolution changed society in a way that being different and expressing your differences was no longer a liability.
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s work in seeking equality for all was consistent with the values expressed by the Jewish sage Hillel two millennia ago: “If I am not for me, who will be?” We must have pride and stand up for our own.
“If I am only for myself, what am I?” To be fully human, we must go beyond our own problems and stand up for others.
“If not now, when?” Justice delayed is justice denied.
These values were King’s values. Too often we stray from them in society today. This 50th anniversary of his “I Have a Dream” speech is a good time to recommit to those things that brought us all together.
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