January 15, 2015

Page 1

Dr. King

January 15 - 21, 2015

VOL. 64, No. 2

The 1 thing hurting MLK’s legacy: his fighting children by Danielle C. Belton

No stranger to the National Civil Rights Museum, Mayor A C Wharton Jr. on Tuesday took his turn at a podium there and looked ahead about a week to the annual celebration of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. federal holiday. He had been asked to keynote a gathering that reflected collaboration between the law firm of Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis and the Anti-Defamation League. In a room with no chairs left unfilled, he seized up the luncheon theme – “The Legacy: It’s Our Turn.” “It is our turn,” said Wharton, clearly comfortable in a room with a bevy of lawyers. “And it is our turn as we will celebrate next week. …We

SEE FIGHTING ON PAGE 3

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Luncheon sets tone for MLK Day by Karanja A. Ajanaku

How do you solve a problem like the King kids? Since the deaths of their mother, Coretta Scott King, and eldest sibling, Yolanda King, the surviving children of civil rights icon Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. have engaged in some publicly destructive and embarrassing behavior. Lawsuits abound in this King Lear-ish plot as brothers Dexter Scott King and Martin Luther King III have tried to oust sister Bernice King from her spot as CEO of the King Center in Atlanta. The situation reached peak messiness last year when Bernice revealed that her brothers planned to sell their father’s 1964 Nobel Peace Prize and Bible. Now a judge is set to decide this week – just as the nation is set to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day on Monday – whether Bernice must give up the heirlooms or whether the case will go to trial. It’s disgusting that an understandable effort to get better control of their father’s image would turn into this: controversies over money mismanagement; constant lawsuits against King’s documenters, friends and contemporaries; and the image of MLK being used to sell cellphones. But worst of all, who could have guessed that it would dissolve into three children regularly suing and countersuing one another for almost a decade over who would control the millions that make up “King Inc.,” or the estate of Martin Luther King Jr. Inc.? From arguments over what to do with the King Center to the lowest-of-low digs over a $55,000 Lincoln Navigator in 2008, here’s a timeline of the fight for King Inc. December 2005: In an early – and, at the time, rarely seen – public spat, the siblings split on whether to sell the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta to the National Park Service, which currently manages the family church and historic home. Bernice and Martin III oppose the sale, while Yolanda and Dexter support it. At the time the center – founded in 1968 by their mother, Coretta, and managed by her sons – is in need of up to $12 million worth of repairs. Dexter argues that the center would be better off in the hands of the Park Service, which had been trying to acquire the King Center since the 1990s. Says political columnist and longtime friend of the King family Tom Houck: “I think Dexter really wants out (of) the business of being a repository of all things King. ... He feels the feds can do a better job of it, and he won’t have to worry about being criticized by the media anymore.” Ultimately the center stays in the family. January 2006: Coretta Scott King dies, leaving her estate, King Inc. and the King Center in the hands of her surviving children. June 2006: King’s children arrange to have their father’s papers auctioned by Sotheby’s, something they’ve been trying to arrange since at least 2003 but are hastened into doing in light of their mother’s death and the dire financial health of the King estate. In response, Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin organizes a private group to purchase the papers for $32 million, then gifts the papers to MLK’s alma mater, Morehouse College. May 2007: Eldest sister Yolanda dies. Some reports say that Yolanda was the peacemaker among the siblings. Family friend the Rev. Joseph Lowery would say that the King children always had their differences but Yolanda served as a bridge between them, and now “that bridge is no longer there.” July 2008: Bernice and Martin III sue Dexter, accusing Dexter, who is the president of King Inc., of cutting them out of the decision-making process, as well as taking funds from their mother’s estate and placing them in their father’s estate, of which he is CEO. They claim that Dexter has withheld documents from them and has refused to hold shareholders’ meetings since 2004. The suit also targets how the funds from the $32 million sale of King’s papers will be divided and the siblings’ exclusion from a licensing deal for the use of King’s

19th

‘It is our turn’

Upcoming ruling is a reminder The Root

January

kajanaku@tsdmemphis.com

Mark J. Moskowitz, Southeast Regional Director for the Anti-Defamation League know the dream (of Dr. King) and what it is about. What do we do with it?” It was not the first nor will it be the

Terri Lee Freeman, National Civil Rights Museum President last time a speaker poses such a question as an observance of MLK Day looms. Wharton knew that, careful to tie his question to current events for

weight and validity. “I don’t know anyone who can make an appearance anywhere at this time and in this season without taking stock of the world in which we live and the conditions that threaten and call into question the mere viability of the basic truth that in God’s sight ‘I am a man,’” he said, borrowing the phrase forever linked with the Sanitation Workers Strike in Memphis in 1968. “Or change the words: I am a woman, I’m a Gentile, I’m a Jew, I’m Muslim.” Referencing the terrorist attacks that recently rocked Paris, Boko Haram’s slaughter of 2000-plus people in Nigeria and happenings in places such as Syria, Afghanistan and Pakistan, Wharton said the “ugly head of SEE LUNCHEON ON PAGE 2

COMMENTARY

‘Charlie,’ meet Dr. King by Bernal E. Smith II besmith@tsdmemphis.com

Trenton Watson, a principal with the W.E.B. Dubois Consortium of Charter Schools, shares his thoughts during the Heal the Hood Foundation’s Citywide Anti-Violence Youth Symposium featuring Sybrina Fulton, the mother of slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin. Also pictured: Fulton’s son, Jahvaris Fulton (right), and LaDell Beamon, the Foundation’s CEO. (Photos: George Till Man Jr.)

‘Don’t become comfortable with young lives being lost’ by Brittney Gathen

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

The crowd – young, old and in between – packed Unity Christian Church in Whitehaven for the Heal the Hood Foundation’s Citywide Anti-Violence Youth Symposium featuring Sybrina Fulton, the mother of slain Florida teenager Trayvon Martin, whose name is now known throughout the nation. Fully engaged, Trayvon’s audience members mom says came prepared with questions for stay mad, active Fulton. What can people do and en- young to cause change? gaged What is her opinion of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have A Dream” speech. The Jan. 9th symposium was part of Heal the Hood’s 97 Days of Hope – a campaign that started Oct. 18 and has generated a string of events designed to restore peace and unity in Memphis and to highlight the positive aspects of the city and its people. By self-descripiton an “average mom” of two sons before Trayvon was killed by neighborhood security guard George Zimmerman in 2012, Fulton, who worked as a housing agency employee, said that the time she had no knowledge of the “Stand Your Ground” law that has become intertwined with Trayvon’s memory. Since then, she has started the Trayvon Martin Foundation to create awareness of how violent crime impacts the families of the victims and to provide support and advocacy for those families. The Foundation also promotes discussions about violent

Sybrina Fulton and her son Jahvaris Fulton. crime, seeks to enhance awareness about racial, ethnic and gender profiling, and educates youth on conflict resolution techniques. “We created the Trayvon Martin Foundation so that we could channel our negative energy into something positive, and that’s what you have to do; you have to channel your negative energy into something positive,” Fulton said. “You have to connect yourself with a viable organization that’s meaningful to you because you have to donate your time, and you may have to donate some money so that organization can do what it needs to do to help our children, because we will have to save our children, Don’t become comfortable with young lives being lost, she said, urging each attendee to take the next step and stay mad, active and engaged. “The regular order is for our kids to bury us. Something is out of order when we start to bury our kids and it becomes normal.”

Fielding the question about what young people can do to cause change and address issues such as violence, Fulton suggested that they create a chat room or other online platform to talk amongst themselves. She also suggested that young people donate time and efforts to organizations and pay more attention to people who care about them. As for her opinion of Dr. King’s “I Have a Dream Speech,” Fulton said there is still progress to be made and that people must stop talking around things. “If it’s discrimination, we need to say it’s discrimination. If it’s racial profiling, we need to say it’s racial profiling.” Asked about how to raise African-American sons not be fearful, Fulton emphasized the importance of addressing how other people perceive African-American males. She challenged the audience to discuss issues such as racial profiling with those who are not knowledgeable about such topics. In the course of working for change, we must never give up, she said. “We can make positive change. If we don’t fight for our children, no one is going to fight for them. If we don’t fight for ourselves, nobody is going to fight for us. …We have to stand up (and) we have to do it peacefully and with respect, and we can get this done.” Panel discussion: Respect & redefining being black The symposium included a panel discussion faciliated by Pastor Terrell SEE TRAYVON ON PAGE 2

As the owner of a print publication and multi-media business, I am torn on the Charlie Hebdo saga unfolding in France. I have a profound appreciation for free speech and Bernal E. its liberating Smith ll power, particularly when truth is being brought to light and power. Clearly a free press and free speech are instrumental in change movements. They allow for exposure – if not the prevention – of anarchy and corruption. However, nothing is totally free and all things come with a price, especially when abused. Satire for satire sake or to prove some point or (even worse) to antagonize is dangerous. The team at Charlie Hebdo, Paris’ satirical weekly magazine, pushed and continues to push the envelope in the name of “free speech.” But, at what cost? Belief is one of the most powerful things human beings hold onto. It can be irrational in the eyes of some yet completely rational and profound to the holder of those beliefs. Challenging one’s beliefs or offending in the name of your own is a dangerous and slippery slope with potential to evoke irrational responses. The conventional wisdom passed SEE ‘CHARLIE’ ON PAGE 2

MEMPHIS WEEKEND

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

H-52o - L-34o Sunny

REGIONAL TEMPS LITTLE ROCK NASHVILLE JACKSON, MS

H-55o - L-34o

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SUNDAY

H-55o - L-45o

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Friday Saturday Sunday H-54 L-32 H-55 L-35 H-55 L-43 H-49 L-31 H-54 L-33 H-52 L-37 H-54 L-31 H-60 L-38 H-61 L-44


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