George Mason University
The U.S. census recently reported that the income gap between the richest and the poorest in the United States has doubled since 1968 (from a ratio of 7.69 to 1 to 14.5-to-1 in 2010), the United States is currently active in not one but three major wars, and there are more black men in American prisons today than there were slaves in 1850. You don’t need a crystal ball, or a giant granite one, to know Martin Luther King’s response to this condition.
In spite of the justifiable and
touching power the new Martin Luther King
Memorial on the National Mall in D.C. takes from our nostalgia for the
Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, it fails to move us any closer to
understanding or realizing how a living monument to King's dream requires our
resistance to militaristic and economic forms of oppression. The Memorial whitewashes any sense of King as
activist, disrupter of power structures, and critic of economic systems. It hides the struggle demanded by King.
A figural 30 ft-tall sculpture
of MLK emerges partially formed from a block of granite, called The Stone of
Hope, which appears to be the middle third of a giant boulder, sliced out and
pushed from between the other two slabs of rock—The Mountain of Despair—towards
the tidal basin on the National Mall.
The colossal white granite memorial, located at the cartoonish address
of 1964 Independence Ave., SW DC, sternly faces the Jefferson Memorial, with
its back towards the Lincoln.
None of the fourteen quotations
carved into the wide marble wall that arcs around and behind the statue of King
refers directly to King's work against economic injustice. One quotation, from his Nobel Prize
acceptance speech, does suggest the audacity of his desire that all people
receive three meals a day.
Unfortunately, this phrase becomes a touching platitude when removed
from demands for state action or public policy.
The architect carved two additional quotations onto the sides of the
statue of King, including one that has provoked significant criticism in which
King appears to be describing himself as a “drum major for justice.”
King’s original quotation suggested that he didn’t mind being deprecated in the service of the cause even if critics wanted to call him a “drum major for justice.” Exactly the meaning suggested by the redaction; Maya Angelou said that edit made King look like an "arrogant twit." The Foundation missed the point, but, worse, they missed an opportunity and wasted valuable space with a clichéd phrase, when King authored so many pithy statements of purpose. King's remarks, for example, concerning the seat of the national government are remarkably appropriate for display in Washington DC: “We will place the problems of the poor at the seat of government of the wealthiest nation in the history of mankind.” The statements displayed on the memorial fail to provide much meaning to King’s vision, even as they strategically lack any reference to his economic demands.
This shouldn’t be too
surprising. In spite of their repeated
attempts to destroy organized labor, suppress wages, and general success at
shifting wealth to the very rich, major corporations paid for this
memorial. Coke, Ford, Target,
ExxonMobil, BP, FannieMae, JPMorgan Chase @ Co., NFL, McDonalds, and Lehman
Brothers all donated to the Memorial and are listed on the major
contributors page. General Motors
donated $10 million. Wall-Mart gave $1
million. The Foundation proudly proclaims the faith these major donors have in
King’s dream. “By their generous
support,” the website proclaims, “they’ve demonstrated something truly
remarkable. They’ve shown the breadth of
support that exists for Dr. King’s vision, from the man on the street to
boardrooms on the fiftieth floor.”
Those
boardrooms, high above the people occupying the street, did not offer large donations
in order to memorialize the fact that King was assassinated in 1968 while in
Memphis supporting striking sanitation workers; that just days after her
husband’s murder Coretta Scott King and 42,000 people peacefully marched
through Memphis to demand that the Mayor of Memphis recognize the sanitation
worker’s union; that at the time of his assassination King was hard at work on
the Poor People’s Campaign. Neither Walmart nor Target,
companies that have dedicated massive financial resources to fighting labor
unions, could be expected to memorialize King’s vision for the power of
organized labor. Certainly not Coke, with its history of fighting unions in
Guatemala and accusations that the company has used prison labor in China, and
its probable complicity in the death of union organizers in Columbia. These donors, I claim, paid for a Memorial
that would help us forget that the revolution, as Gil
Scott-Heron sang, "does not go better with Coke." They got what they paid for; the Memorial
does not offer any sense of the stern criticism King would certainly direct
toward the labor practices of many of these companies. The problem is not that they gave money for
the Memorial, it’s that the Memorial fails to display the conflict those
donations have with King’s labor advocacy. “We call our demonstration a
campaign for jobs and income,” King wrote, “because we feel that the economic
question is the most crucial that black people, and poor people generally, are
confronting.” (A Testament of Hope: The Essential Writings
and Speeches of Martin Luther King Jr., Pages 67-69) Simply allowing the Memorial to
deliver King’s message concerning the importance of organized labor on a
monument paid for by labor busters would offer a better representation of the
struggle that King advocated.
Corporations were not the only
donors, nor were they the only donors with labor policies in serious conflict
with King's struggle. The Memorial, as
many have remarked, was created in China. The Chinese government, probably the largest
single donor to the memorial, gave the foundation $25 million--the U.S.
government only gave $10 million in matching funds. The Foundation naively denies that the
Chinese donation influenced their decision to create the memorial in
China. Union representatives in the
United States protested the contract with China and eventually received a
promise from Johnson that union labor would be used to assemble the monument in
the United States. Then in September of
last year, the union discovered that the Foundation had reneged on this written
promise and that unpaid workers from China were working on the Memorial. Harry S. Johnson, president and CEO of the
Memorial Foundation, evoked a hypocritical claim to
racial harmony to hide the issue of economic exploitation. On September 8, the
Foundation asserted: “While 95% of the
work is being done by American workers, we strongly believe that we should not
exclude anyone from working on this project simply because of their religious beliefs,
social background or country of origin.”
The
Foundation consistently gestured toward pluralism and artistic integrity to
make the exploitative dimension of their economic choices disappear. According to Ed Jackson Jr., the Executive
Architect on the project: “The granite
for King's statue was chosen because when lit at night, it lends a brownish
tone to King's likeness. The stone, however, only exists in China.” though, he
added, “some wanted it to come from the United States.” All the white marble on the National Mall,
whether from China, Italy or New Hampshire, gets darker when the sun goes
down. Jackson’s ridiculous claim about
the color of the statue raises another, more obvious, question: why not use black granite? Martin Luther King
was Black.
Birmingham, Alabama King Memorial |
The
assertion, given broad currency in the 1960s, that “black is beautiful”
highlights a politics of aesthetic taste. The color and shape of the statue of
King appears as a visual and sensual event. The body with its attractions (of
color, shape, size, strength, weakness, etc.) functions as a political trigger
for desire and emulation. Plenty of our
responses to the appearance of the human body are beyond and before our
understanding of actions, arguments, and behaviors. Such responses are an
important part of our political life.
Monuments operate in this field.
King’s physical appearance moves us; King deserved a monument that would
move us.
Binghamton, New York King Memorial |
It
is inescapably necessary to represent King in earlier categories of power and
value but the valuable struggle comes in using that positioning to undercut the
borrowed hierarchy. Borrow the trappings of power but only to transform the
terms of success. Take some money from Coke but spend that money to support the
Columbian food workers union, SINALTRAINAL. This Memorial fails because it never displays
the struggle necessary for political life.
King’s life was a life of this struggle.
King's arrest for 'loitering,' 1958 |
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