Men Who Ignited Martin Luther King Jnr (MLK)

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We've heard of Men who built America, Men behind the Dubai revolution...
Have we asked how they were built, or of the men behind the men who did what they did?

Behind every success there's always a story! In every story, there are books, men, conversations, motivations, ... and ignition points!

Every great man was fired up by other great men, that's why gifted people are not afraid of other gifted people they leverage on each others gifting and compliment one another.
Today, this seems to be unusual, as we Saul's trying to slay their David.
We need those young folks with our 'five loaves of bread and two fishes'

Here are ten people whom MARTIN LUTHER KING JNR quoted, some often, and whom he continued to quote until the end.

1) Thomas Carlyle.  On more than one occasion, Dr. King said, “We shall overcome, because Carlyle is right, ‘No lie can live forever,’” as he did in March of 1968.   Thomas Carlyle was a Scottish writer and historian during the Victorian era.  After his first great work, Sartor Resartus, in which one man is followed on his own search for truth, Carlyle moved to history and wrote a book entitled The French Revolution.  In this, Carlyle saw morality, truth, and justice in the great events in history.  Dr. King is quoting this history book.

2) William Cullen Bryant.  In combination with his quote of Carlyle, #MARTINLUTHERKINGJNR would add, “William Cullen Bryant is right: ‘Truth crushed to earth will rise again.’”  Bryant was an American poet and long-time editor of the New York Evening Post.  King here referred to his poem “The Battlefield,” which compares the lifelong struggle for truth to soldiers at war.  The broader context, comparing truth to victory and error to defeat is: “Truth, crushed to earth, shall rise again; The eternal years of God are hers;  But Error, wounded, writhes in pain, And dies among his worshipers.”

3) James Russell Lowell. Along with Carlyle and Bryant, #MARTINLUTHERKINGJNR would add one final quotation to this section of his speech (MARH 31, 1968), and he did so here: “We shall overcome because James Russell Lowell is right: ‘Truth forever on the scaffold, Wrong forever on the throne; Yet that scaffold sways the future, and, behind the dim unknown, Standeth God within the shadow, keeping watch above his own.’”  Both Lowell and Bryant were among the first American poets to rival their British counterparts in popularity.  They belonged to a group we now call the Fireside Poets.  This quotation is from “The Present Crisis,” Lowell’s 1845 work about the slavery crisis that inspired Dr. King and also was the inspiration for the NAACP’s main publication, The Crisis.

4) John Donne. A few weeks before his March 31 speech, speaking at Grosse Point High School, Dr. MLK Jnr quoted Donne in saying, “‘No man is an island.’”  Donne was an English poet who wrote around the turn of the 17th century.   King explained the context, his inspiration: “The tide that fills every man is a piece of the continent, a part of the main. And [Donne] goes on toward the end to say, ‘any man’s death diminishes me because I’m involved in mankind. Therefore, it’s not to know for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee.’ Somehow we must come to see that in this pluralistic, interrelated society we are all tied together in a single garment of destiny, caught in an inescapable network of mutuality.”

5) Gandhi.  Earlier, in a 1962 religious sermon in Los Angeles, #MARTINLUTHERKINGJNR counseled against anger and hate, saying, “There is another way… as modern as Gandhi saying through Thoreau, that ‘non‑cooperation with evil is as much a moral obligation as is cooperation with good.’”  King read the works of Gandhi and quoted him throughout his life.  There is a direct line of the teachings of civil disobedience and peaceful demonstration from Dr. King through Gandhi and to numbers 6 and 7 on this list.

6) Henry David Thoreau.  The above quote is actually referencing Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience, an essay by the Transcendentalist author, who wrote Walden but also wrote this text on the obligation of the people to non-violently disobey laws they believe are unlawful.  ”No other person has been more eloquent and passionate in getting this idea across than Henry David Thoreau,” King wrote in his autobiography.

7) Leo Tolstoy.  In his own writings, Dr. MLK Jnr pointed to the Russian writer as a primary source of his inspiration. King read Tolstoy and his religious texts, as well as War and Peace, as did Gandhi before him.

8) Washington Irving.  On March 31, the same day as his other speech, Dr. King also addressed an audience at the National Cathedral in Washington, saying: “The most striking thing about the story of Rip Van Winkle is not merely that Rip slept twenty years, but that he slept through a revolution.”  ”Rip Van Winkle” is the famous story by the 19th century storyteller, Washington Irving, about a man who goes to sleep while King George III rules the colonies and wakes up in a new world where George Washington is President.  King continued in this speech, “All too many people find themselves living amid a great period of social change, and yet they fail to develop the new attitudes, the new mental responses, that the new situation demands. They end up sleeping through a revolution.”

9) Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The Carnegie Council describes an address that King gave a few months before his death to the staff of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He said, “May it not be that the new man the world needs is the non-violent man? Longfellow said: ‘In this world a man must either be an anvil or the hammer.’ We must be hammers shaping a new society rather than anvils molded by the old.” Longfellow was also one of the Fireside Poets.

10) Ralph Waldo Emerson. Also shortly before his death, in October of 1967, Dr. King spoke to students at Barratt Junior High School in Philadelphia. He said, “Ralph Waldo Emerson, the great essayist, said in a lecture in 1871, ‘If a man can write a better book or preach a better sermon or make a better mousetrap than his neighbor, even if he builds his house in the woods, the world will make a beaten path to his door.’ This hasn’t always been true — but it will become increasingly true, and so I would urge you to study hard, to burn the midnight oil.” Emerson, like Thoreau, was a Transcendentalist author who was among the intellectual leaders of the movement. They opposed slavery and spoke out against it before the Civil War.

Dr. King’s strongest source of inspiration and appear in nearly every major address he gave was JESUS AND THE BIBLE.  As an example, on March 31, he said, “We shall overcome because the Bible is right, ‘You shall reap what you sow.’” This is a paraphrase of Galatins 6, verses 7-9: “Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. For he that soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting. And let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.”

(PEOPLE WHO INSPIRED #MARTINLUTHERKINGJNR Adapted from FORBES)

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