KING ASSASSINATION
By Dr. Barbara A. Reynolds
And when his brothers
saw him they said one to another, "behold the dreamer cometh," come now and slay him…and we shall see what
will become of his dreams. (Genesis 37:18-20)
I have given lip service to the unprecedented saga of Senator Barack
Obama to become president of the United States, but not my heart-felt support. I wonder is it because I have seen so much
tragedy confront our big dreamers, especially African-Americans, that like a mother to a son I have to curb my enthusiasm.
In a few days we commemorate not only the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis,
but also the mysterious death and possible assassination of the first black Commerce Secretary Ron Brown. On April 3, 1996,
on the eve of Dr. King’s murder-- some 28 years before-- Brown’s plane went down, along with 34 others, on a mountaintop
in Croatia.
Not only have these two great men been taken from us, but also the historic memory of why they died,
how their dreams have been twisted and what does all of this portend for the next Big Dreamer.
If Dr. King and
Brown were only dreamers, they would have been alive today. Dr. King was one of the 20th century’s greatest prophets,
a man who had the skills to analyze, organize and activate. The King movement showed first the victims and then the victimizers
that the way U.S. blacks were forced to live under a reign of terror, without dignity nor democracy, was a sin and a scandal.
King and the movement reordered traditional social relationships. That meant no longer would blacks, browns, women,
the handicapped or any other group accept the status of a valueless nobody without a fight. And this vision of equality was
translated into a world-view that challenges this nation’s concept of a global superiority that permits it to invade
other countries to steal their resources and subjugate their people.
King, the activist, is not the King that the
media serves up ever King holiday that has him sleepwalking through history. The King the media has created could be used
in ads for mattresses: "Come buy the King mattress and you too could have a dream."
King in his prophetic mission
did not always use somnambulistic language, but fiery challenges, not much different from the spirited sermons of Pastor Jeremiah
Wright. King often quoted the Negro fight song that "before I be a slave, I’ll be buried in my grave and go home
to my Lord and be free."
King’s militant non-violent context resulted in his death. Unfortunately as
we commemorate his death, the nagging questions surrounding it, as well as that of Brown, remain. For example:
Why
were the two black firemen who watched over Dr. King when he was in Memphis transferred from their post the evening before
the killing?
Why has the sworn testimony of Lloyd Jowers been ignored? Jowers, who owned Jim’s Grill across from
the Lorraine Motel, said he was offered $100,000 from a Mafia businessman to set up the killing of King in which a patsy (James
Earl Ray) would be provided. Jowers said after the shooting, he took the "smoking rifle," from the hit man, who
was not Ray.
Why has Rev. Walter Fauntroy, the former delegate from the District of Columbia, who was on the sub-committee
of the King assassination panel, maintained: "The assassination was a conspiracy involving operatives in our intelligence
agency, including the military, along with the Mafia and corporate interests."
In the case of Brown, two weeks
before his plane crashed, he called me to his office to observe a new plan of action, which he felt would drastically change
the plight of Africa, by launching a new program based on trade not aid.
Brown, too, was a big dreamer whose dreams
would have benefited people of color globally. Few people these days mention him nor is there any action to investigate why
forensic pathologists stepped forward and put their careers on the line to say that Brown’s skull had a hole that resembled
a bullet wound. Yet, to my knowledge there has been no independent autopsy and neither are the media or civil rights groups
clamoring for it.
No credible explanations were ever given to why there were no cockpit recorders aboard the government
aircraft, why an experienced pilot was replaced by someone with lesser experience and why the maintenance chief at the airport
where Brown’s plane crashed, was found dead before U.S. investigators reached him, reportedly from a self-inflicted
wound.
If Obama becomes the first black president, this would mean a black man would be commander- in -chief of
the most lethal superpower on the globe. In addition under his administration, he could influence world trade, the global
financial markets, the course of the Middle East and shape the direction of the U.S. Supreme Court.
Even more important,
Obama would possibly be privy to all or most of the United States dirty secrets.
At least two other African-Americans
who stepped on or into the power stream of the United States were taken out.
As the nation commemorates Dr. King,
I can’t help but worry if the rulers of a nation built on the foundation of white supremacy will once again see the
dreamer coming.
And then would they slay him?
Dr. Barbara A. Reynolds, an ordained minister, is author of
several books, including "NO I Won’t Shut UP, is an adjunct professor at the Howard University School of Divinity
and a religion columnist for the National Newspapers Publishers Association.