[Weekly Wire]

  Recalling "Young Moses"
  -------------------------------------------------------------

  By Jackson Baker

  APRIL 13, 1998:  The weekend of remembrances for the late
  Dr. Martin Luther King begins strangely:

  There, at the vestibule of historic Clayborn (AME) Temple on
  Hernando St. on Friday morning is the Rev. James Lawson, ex-
  of the Memphis ministry and now of Los Angeles, an
  impressive figure whose hair, gone white in the 30 years
  since the death of Dr. Martin Luther King, crowns him now as
  the patriarch he is.

     Lawson is one of those - like the Rev. Samuel Billy
     Kyles, like the Rev. Jesse Jackson, and so many others
  among the several thousand gathered in Memphis to mark the
  anniversary of the martyr's assassination - who were there,
  either at the Lorraine Motel or close by when Dr. King was
  felled by a 30.06 rifle bullet at almost 6 on the evening of
  April 4, 1968. His hair was dark then, but his voice could
  not have been any stronger than it is today, as he dilates
  upon the theme of "Chaos or Community?" - which happens
  also, as Lawson notes, to be the title of King's last
  published work.

  Striking a note which others will also intone this weekend,
  out loud or in print, Lawson disdains the familiar term
  "civil rights movement" as a descriptor of his and Dr.
  King's mission: "We called ourselves a liberation movement,
  a freedom movement, a justice movement, a movement to
  transform America � to redeem the soul of America." It was a
  movement "not only for black people, or for the defeat of
  white people," he says.

  It was a movement, Lawson explains, that concerned itself
  with strikes (notably, of course, the 1968 strike of Memphis
  sanitation workers which would be Dr. King's last crusade)
  and with nuclear weaponry and with the condition of working
  people in general. It was all of this - and no mere issue of
  color - that delivered Martin Luther King to his
  "crucifixion" in Memphis.

  There is much in that vein, and Lawson says it both
  majestically and convincingly persuasively. There is also,
  however, a compulsion to confer blame. Mayor Willie Herenton
  is unnamed, but he is the obvious target of a brief
  phillipic Lawson delivers against the tear-gassing of
  protesters at the ill-fated Ku Klux Klan rally in Memphis.

  It is on the subject of the assassination, however, that
  Lawson becomes most intense and accusatory. He talks, as
  other conspiracy theorists have, of the alleged removal of
  police protective units from the care of Dr. King on the
  fateful night, of "two" white Mustangs parked on Main St.,
  of "witnesses" who could swear that James Earl Ray, the
  convicted assassin, did not fire the murder weapon.

  And he names names - among them
  Claude Armour, the director of
  police in 1968, and Bill Gibbons,
  the D.A. of today - to whom he
  imputes, if not complicity, then at
  the very least ignominious
  participation in a coverup. He
  extols Judge Joe Brown - recently
  removed by the state Court of
  Appeals, because of his alleged
  bias, from hearing any more of Ray's petitions - and he
  mentions the word "Nazi" in suggestive proximity to the name
  of Mississippi's Trent Lott, the current Senate majority
  leader.

  Lawson does what he can to exculpate Ray and to explain away
  his 1969 guilty plea, saying at one point, "The sheriff
  incarcerated him in such a way as to cause brainwashing and
  sickness."

  He proclaims, "The issue is not 'conspiracy,' it is, 'Who
  killed Martin Luther King!'" and he rounds to his
  peroration: "We will not permit the crucifixion to go and be
  buried. We will not permit the struggle to be in vain!"

  There have been frequent murmurs of approval - even shouts -
  from the audience. Some in attendance - notably Herenton,
  Gibbons, and U.S. Representative Harold Ford Jr. - have been
  more selective in their response.

  Among those not on hand is Bill Morris, the Shelby County
  sheriff (and later county mayor) who in 1968 was seen, in a
  widely published photograph, leading the captive Ray off to
  his "incarceration." Never a segregationist, Morris had
  black support throughout his political career, sponsored
  innovative programs for impoverished youth, and delivered an
  impassioned apostrophe to Dr. King at the 1991 dedication
  ceremony for the National Civil Rights Museum, mere blocks
  away in the site of the old Lorraine, where other events
  will take place on this commemorative weekend.

  Morris has nonetheless gone down - albeit anonymously - in
  the impromptu oral history of James Lawson, taking his place
  there alongside baritone Lott, that putative Meistersinger
  from Nuremberg, and all the others.

  Friday night's memorial service at Mason Temple, site of
  King's last speech, the uncannily prescient "I've Been to
  the Mountaintop" oration, is - to begin with, anyhow - more
  conventional. Presided over by Kyles, it begins with a
  processional of pastors and banners from a generous
  assortment of the city's churches, both black and white.
  "Onward Christian Soldiers" is sung impressively by a massed
  and integrated choir. In his invocation, the Rev. Dr.
  William Bouknight will plead, "Help us to discover soul
  brothers and soul sisters of many different races."

  Presiding minister Kyles - who can be less than bashful in
  holding forth -

  promises, "I'm resisting being the kind of M.C. who talks
  too much." And, for the most part, he complies. The ceremony
  includes Kallen Esperian singing "Precious Lord," the
  martyr's favorite hymn, and the massed choir doing a version
  of "Oh, Happy Day" that fairly rocks. A number of
  inspirational speakers appear, including such veterans of
  the civil rights struggle as the Rev. James Netters of
  Memphis and Dr. Fred Shuttleworth of Birmingham and such
  political luminaries of the present as Mayor Lee Brown of
  Houston and U.S. Rep. Ford.

  Inevitably, there is the man who bridges religion and
  politics, as well as the past and the present, the Rev.
  Jesse Jackson, who is introduced handsomely by Kyles as the
  last person King spoke to before the bullet hit him, the
  comrade on whom King's freshly spilled blood was first shed.
  (For his part, Jackson will authenticate the fact that it
  was to Kyle's house for a "soul food" dinner that King
  intended to go before the lethal shot rang out.)

  Though he is here mainly to introduce the keynote speaker of
  this affair, the Rev. Dr. Gardner C. Taylor of New York, and
  though his fires - for this or whatever other reason - seem
  more than a little banked, Jackson is still the preeminent
  orator of his time, the successor to Dr. King and, perhaps
  also, to JFK in that respect. He flashes a snapshot of his
  new grandchild and invokes the social gospel, asking people
  in the audience to stand if members of their family have
  suffered from either prostate or breast cancer and pointing
  out that today's managed care medicine is pitifully
  insufficient as a means of dealing with either.

  When Dr. Taylor is introduced, he graciously likens himself
  to a moon in the shadow of Jackson's sun. "Never has so
  little been introduced by so much," he says.

  But he goes on to rouse the crowd with a firebrand sermon in
  which, most memorably, he reiterates Lawson's earlier doubts
  concerning the guilt of James Earl Ray and his certainty
  about the wickedness of the ongoing coverup and promises
  that God will not permit the inquiry into King's death to be
  closed until "we find the truth about who slaughtered our
  young Moses" in 1968.

  The crowd is clearly roused on the point, and Jackson's
  earlier reference to "the shot fired by James Earl Ray"
  seems on its way to be being an overlooked footnote to
  yesterday's take on the assassination. The new line has gone
  beyond law and D.A.'s reports and journalism into politics
  and, now, into theology.

  Even so, the ceremony concludes with audience members,
  "black and white together," joining hands and singing "We
  Shall Overcome."

  Solidarity is the word the next morning as well, when,
  promptly at 8:30, Jackson, Kyles, the Rev. Bill Adkins and
  others lead a veritable rainbow coalition in a march from
  Clayborn Temple to the downtown Convention Center. Visiting
  reporters, like the Atlanta Constitution's Arthur Brice,
  profess awe at the dimensions of the march. "I was prepared
  for it being a couple of blocks long, but it went on for
  eight or ten blocks!" says Brice.

  Inside the convention center, Adkins presides over a rich
  panoply of speakers. Some are new, some are repeats from the
  night before. A couple of speakers break new ground,
  brandishing "Wanted" posters showing the likeness of Shelby
  County General Sessions Court clerk Chris Turner, become a
  public enemy now for "trying to drag Memphis back 30 years"
  in his refusal to recognize the American Federation of
  State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) as
  bargaining agent for his employees.

  The Rev. Jackson tries to focus attention on different
  enemies, on monopolists like Bill Gates, on "Wall Street,
  the capital of Capital," on those who stand against "the
  democratization of capital and wealth," on what he sees as
  the true unfinished business of Martin Luther King. But he
  must also bow to the now dominant mood of skepticism
  concerning how Dr. King was murdered. "There are unanswered
  questions," he says.

  And he concludes, rousingly, "Keep marching/ Keep moving!
  Keep the dream alive!"

  In several afternoon seminars at the Convention Center, the
  unanswered questions receive more scrutiny. White historian
  Taylor Branch belittles prevailing conspiracy theories in
  the death of Dr. King. "If there was a conspiracy, it was a
  truckstop conspiracy involving people like Ray himself" -
  not the likes of Lyndon Johnson, J. Edgar Hoover, and other
  high potentates of the past, who in a version pushed this
  week by Ray's lawyer of record, William Pepper, and others
  might somehow have been involved in a conspiracy, with the
  designated triggerman being one Loyd Jowers, a local short
  order cook and n'er-do-well who has tried repeatedly to
  "confess" on national television.

  That night, as a candlelight vigil
  goes on at the Civil Rights Museum,
  the members of a "Coalition on
  Political Assassinations" (COPA)
  hold their penulti-mate session in a
  small room at the downtown Comfort
  Inn. There is much
  self-congratulation in the testimony
  of these self-proclaimed truth
  seekers, all white except for Dick
  Gregory, the gaunt, dignified former
  comic and all-purpose protester who
  this night will announce the onset
  of yet another of his frequent
  fasts, this one predicated on a new
  trial for Ray or, failing that, on
  immediate presidential action to uncover what is so clearly
  a conspiracy.

  Gregory recalls how he once "hit so big" as a comedian that
  he made $3 million overnight, and he demonstrates why by
  launching into an impromptu bit of standup that soon has
  these sobersided men and their equally dour audience of true
  believers transcending their usual obsession and guffawing
  wildly. Gregory's subjects range from a white family's
  ability to produce "2 l/2 " children ("I told my wife, let's
  go for that half-child. That's how I got 10 kids!") to the
  severed member of John Wayne Bobbitt to Nicole Brown
  Simpson's nocturnal visits to the widower O.J. "The next
  time she comes, that brother ought to ask her, 'Hey, who did
  it, anyhow?'"

  "O.J. did it. You know that!" hollers a man in the second
  row, puncturing the mood and the general laughter and
  persisting in that literal-minded vein even though the
  others are trying desperately to shush him. "Hey man, these
  are just jokes. If you're that hung up �" says Gregory,
  before he shrugs his shoulders and resumes, this time in his
  dead earnest conspiracy-theory mode. The spell has been
  broken.

  Soon, the convicted assassin's brother, Jerry Ray - bald,
  potbellied, and wearing droopy white socks with his dress-up
  pinstripe suit - is introduced to the same prolonged
  applause from these men as they had previously given the
  living Dick Gregory and the dead Martin Luther King.

  Ray, like his brother a veteran of many jail terms in many
  states for many crimes, reminisces a bit about how the feds
  tried to involve him, too, in the King assassination, and,
  nodding toward Gregory, he extends praise to "the black
  race" for its diligence in pursuing all these conspiratorial
  leads.

  One test of the prospects for reconciliation in Memphis was
  the invitation to area churches to ring their bells at the
  stroke of 6 o'clock on Saturday night. A resident of one of
  the city's near suburbs - an area from which some modest
  white flight has already occurred - stood in his backyard at
  the appointed time and listened for the sound of bells from
  either of two churches a block or two away.

  Six o'clock came, and for several minutes there was so sound
  from beyond the wooded area where the churches were. Then,
  maybe five minutes late, a bell - or a recording of a bell -
  was heard for the space of a few seconds. Keep the dream
  alive.Then, silence - and the normal evening traffic noises.



     * Memphis Flyer


                                               [Memphis Flyer]











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