If many historians would properly look at Dr. King’s famous speech, they would realize that Dr. King only saw voting rights and politics as a beginning to an end for African Americans and Americans. Dr. King believed that if African Americans could vote than they could impact many elections by electing not only African Americans to public office but voting people who believed in helping African Americans to office would help advance the African American agenda. Dr. King also felt that politics could impact the lives of not just African Americans but all Americans because many Americans were facing some of the same issues as Black America.
Dr. King’s dream is not over because America elected Barack Obama as the nation’s 44th President but it is just the beginning of Dr. King’s dream. Now America can finally stop being divided by black and white issues because black issues are America’s issues. The same things that plague the African American communities across America are the same things that plague all of America. While some of the things that African Americans deal with might be worse, it doesn’t mean that the rest of America is not facing the exact same issues. That’s why it is important that Americans understand that Dr. King’s dream is just beginning not ending.
Dr. King spoke of racial equality, economic justice and education equity. However Dr. King always felt that through politics all of this could be achieved with the right people in office fighting for not just African Americans or White America but all America. Dr. King knew that when he delivered his famous “I Have A Dream” speech that he wouldn’t be alive to realize the “Dream” with us because he knew that his “Dream” was not just about voting rights and politics but it was far much more. Dr. King’s “Dream” is a dream that many of us would love to see but perhaps all of Dr. King’s “Dream” will not be seen in some of our lifetime but it will be achieved.
That’s why the day that any of us start to believe that Dr. King’s “Dream” is over than the rest of Dr. King’s “Dream” will not be possible. We have to carry on Dr. King’s “Dream” no matter what because the truth of the matter is that Dr. King’s “Dream” stretched beyond the political spectrum but it began with politics. Politics is the core door or opening to so many things that ail us as a people and Dr. King knew that if we could change the political spectrum in America than so many things that separate us as people could be united with the right legislation and the right people leading the charge to enact the laws that divided us as a people.
Now at the same time, Dr. King’s “Dream” would not have been possible without others who paved the way for Dr. King to dream like Thurgood Marshall and the famous Brown vs. Board case, Frederick Douglas, W.E.B. DuBois and Marcus Garvey, just to name a few. Dr. King’s “Dream” was paved because of these people and his dream flourished because of people like us, ordinary Americans who didn’t allow Dr. King’s death to be in vain. Dr. King’s birthday should never ever be a celebration or simply a day of service because it is so much more. It is a day of sacrifice and a day of triumph for not just African Americans but all Americans. Dr. King dreamed the “Dream” for all of America to not only hear but to envision and believe in. Dr. King’s birthday is a day that commemorates his “Dream” but his “Dream” should be lived each and every day through the hearts & lives of all Americans.
Dr. King’s “Dream” is not by any means over. It is just beginning and that is something that all of us need to realize that we have not yet achieved racial equality but we sure have come a long way since King spoke about his dream. We have not achieved economic justice when the wage gap between men and women is still so prevalent and evident but has closed over recent generations but not fast enough. We have not achieved education equity when we have so many failing schools within urban school districts and the achievement gap between public and private schools grows with each and every birth we take in this nation. That’s why Dr. King’s “Dream” is not over but it is only the beginning.
The election of Barack Obama is only one part of Dr. King’s “Dream” and if any of us think for one moment that King’s “Dream” has been achieved than the rest of King’s “Dream” will die off like many other dreams. Dr. King is a martyr of the Civil Rights Movement because he dreamed the “Dream” that many of us are living today and he dreamed the “Dream” that many of us are fighting to keep alive today. Dr. King’s “Dream” paved the way for many of us to achieve the dreams that we have obtained today. However Dr. King’s “Dream” is not over because so many of us and generations to come need the rest of King’s dream to be fulfilled.
We cannot allow the rest of Dr. King’s “Dream” to die off like so many other dreams in this country. We must not allow racial equality to go into a standstill or at worst get worse. We cannot allow economic justice to get worst during a time when so many Americans are suffering because of the strong preying on the poor and hopeless. We cannot allow education equity to go by without it being achieved when so many of our youth need education in order to get out of the tough neighborhoods and conditions that they are facing today. Dr. King’s “Dream” is not over and the sooner many of us realize that than sooner we all can make sure that the lives of so many other Americans gets better generation after generation.
Don’t allow the election of Barack Obama to diminish Dr. King’s “Dream” that was so much more than voting rights and politics. Dr. King’s “Dream” needs us now more than ever before and that is why we must keep King’s “Dream” with us throughout this year and beyond.
THE DREAM IS NOT OVER!
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