Martin Luther King -- A Fatal Blow to Idealism
The Question: The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated 40 years ago. What are your memories of that day? What impact did it have on you? How is King relevant to you and to us today?
To turn into a sainted memory is a poor memorial for a man of action. I was in medical school in India in 1968 and therefore saw the murder of Martin Luther King as a blurry image from a faraway land. Moving to America was still three years off. But unlike other foreigners who self-righteously decried the level of guns and violence in the U.S., Indians were keenly aware of what an assassination can do. It can end an era of idealism, which is what happened when Gandhi was killed in 1948 by a Hindu extremist while taking his evening stroll. In both cases the ideal that died was the same: Satyagraha, or active non-violent resistance. Dr. King was consciously a descendant of Gandhi as well as of Thoreau and his philosophy of civil disobedience.
The most appropriate memorial to Dr. King is a rebirth of idealism. 1968 was a fateful year for idealism in America, its death throes having begun with the assassination of Pres. Kennedy five years before. After the double murders of Robert Kennedy and Dr. King, followed by the chaotic election that ushered in the Nixon era, a right-wing revolution was well underway, culminating in the rise to power of Reaganism and later the Bush neocons. For 40 years the vacuum of hope has been filled by its very opposite: entrenched power, reactionary religious movements, unchecked militarism, middle-class apathy, and a feeling of resignation toward de facto segregation.
It's disheartening that America would heed a manipulative slogan like "Are you better off today than you were four years ago?" without asking, "Is your soul better off today than it was four years ago?" But the retreat into selfishness and partisan ideology occurred. Now we have a chance to do something about it. The implicit hopelessness that fell like a shroud over America in 1968 has affected us all. Human beings adapt, of course, but some adaptations are too hard on the spirit. If he could speak today, I think Dr. King would ask for racial equality and the end of poverty, as he did in life. But first he would ask for a revival of spirit, without which every social reform is little more than bickering over entitlement while hiding the heart from view.
By
Deepak Chopra
|
April 5, 2008; 8:03 AM ET
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Posted by: Tony | April 7, 2008 9:25 PM
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A poem I wrote 56 years ago when I committed to the Christian ministry:
Sidewalks Of Fog
The literal minds must swallow
Jesus' pedestrian aquatics to
Prove their right to salvation's
Clique; but we
Stroll on sidewalks of fog
without a second thought.
Frank Halse
Posted by: rev, frank halse (ret) | April 7, 2008 8:32 AM
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Excellent post and point, Dr. Chopra. As with some of your other posts, there is nothing else to say.
Posted by: marcus2 | April 7, 2008 5:22 AM
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Dear Deepak,
Your answer is written in love, in the hope of awakening spirit within all of us. We need spirit, we need to step up to the plate of our actions and stop pointing fingers.
Now is the time to stop creating, by realizing that we are the creators of the differences we see in this world.
Posted by: Anonymous | April 6, 2008 5:02 PM
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"a revival of spirit, without which every social reform is little more than bickering over entitlement while hiding the heart from view"
Indeed! Time to show this world how vastly superior, how Christ-like, compassionate socialism is, in direct opposition to "compassionate" but we are inherently selfish so make more money conservativism.
Amen
Posted by: empyrius | April 6, 2008 2:14 PM
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Deepak,
A profound message, thank you. I only disagree on one point: the assassination of Dr King was not a fatal blow. His message lives, and is still strong. His dream goes marching on.
Arminius
Posted by: Arminius | April 5, 2008 8:49 PM
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anonymous...wow....u suck....so, are you 13 or 12, it is obvious you are male, don't worry someone will explain those things that are happening to your body...when one is frightened they tend to lash out...hang tight.
Posted by: rann | April 5, 2008 7:34 PM
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All in all a close approach to reality of the Assassination but far to shallow.
Posted by: garyd | April 5, 2008 6:00 PM
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u suck
Posted by: Anonymous | April 5, 2008 12:07 PM
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I'm confused, Dr. Chopra. You donated the maximum amount several times to Senator Clinton when she was leading. It's easily checked with a google search. But now you seem to be supporting Senator Obama???