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    The Tennessee TribuneThe Tennessee Tribune
    Featured

    MLK Jr. Revered, The Donald Reviled

    Clint ConfehrBy Clint ConfehrJanuary 19, 2017Updated:January 19, 2017No Comments4 Mins Read
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    By Clint Confehr

    The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was praised during Middle Tennessee’s MLK Day in contrast to the politician who’s to be sworn-in as President on Friday.

    “‘Lord, what are you trying to do to us now?’” Andrew Young told 650 people in the Music City Center,  Charles Robert Bone reported after the Bone McAllister Norton law firm’s 16th annual MLK Fellowship Breakfast.

    That’s how the Civil Rights icon reflected on the 2016 election, Bone said. Young is “not worried about what the future holds because he knows who holds the future.”

    Acceptance was heard elsewhere.

    “It’s a hard pill to swallow, but we all know who’s in charge,” said Mary Wade, awards committee chair for Murfreesboro’s NAACP Branch. Her day started in La Vergne City Hall where she spoke of Rev. King’s dream and the dreamers; those who want to stay and those aspiring to serve on school boards and other places.

    In Columbia, the Rev. T. Devan Franklin III, Lake Providence Baptist Church on Nolensville Road, spoke in Mt. Lebanon Missionary Baptist Church honoring Dr. King and a Maury County Civil Rights pioneer, the late Rev. David Williams Sr.

    The President-elect “used hate to get elected … [and] disrespected … others … not like him,” Franklin said. “We are … honoring a man who changed this country with a dream that it could be better … In four days we … swear-in the man who seems … to want to erase our progress … and make America what it was again; great for some … not for all …”

    Another long message was shortened by Barbara Dobbins; “If you don’t think your vote counts — dot, dot, dot.” The Freedom Fund Banquet chair, a retired principal, was the first woman president of Maury’s branch.

    “All lives matter and our vote counts” was the theme for the branch in Clarksville led by Jimmie Garland, vice president of  Tennessee’s NAACP State Conference.

    Jim Crow was described as David Williams III of Atlanta retold stories from his father, Columbia’s revered leader. Mid-1950s’ segregation prevented them from dining at Shoney’s, so they ate at Bonnies’ on Pulaski Highway. NAACP leaders sought work for blacks at Columbia groceries, were denied by one who was told by Milton Murray his store would burn, so grocers’ unified opposition vanished and blacks were hired.

    When drugs killed young blacks, Rev. Williams held a public meeting. Parents, police and elected leaders would’ve ejected a dealer, but Williams wanted him to know what they’d do. A hit was called on the preacher, but Murray had Black Panthers protect Williams.

    Murfreesboro NAACP Youth Council President Malcolm Dorsey encouraged young people to be part of the solution, not a problem. The branch marched from Central Magnet School to Patterson Community Center. “Heredity, where you’re coming from, where you’re going and that you have to do something” were discussed, Wade said.

    Nearly 650 marched in Clarksville, Garland said. It’s a day to do something, not a holiday. At Burt Elementary School, raising children was discussed.

    State Rep. John DeBarry of Memphis, a friend of Lewisburg Public Housing Director Ronald Robinson, spoke to 50 at Marshall’s courthouse about disciples watching Jesus rise when they should have gone out to do what He said to do.

    Waiting to hear UCLA and Columbia Law schools Professor Kimberle Crenshaw speak Monday at Vanderbilt University was Ariel Smith, 24, who’d marched on Jefferson Street in solidarity for MLK, explaining many fought for what’s enjoyed now. From Birmingham, the education major says too many recall King’s “I Have a Dream” speech, but don’t know he sought decency in 1963 and true equality in 1967. “If we’re going to honor MLK, let’s honor it all, not just the warm and fuzzy … We’ve not made the progress we need.”

    Dr. Angela Huff, a retired educator, explained the importance of the NAACP and the Civil Rights movement at Nashville’s branch office, president Ludy Wallace said. International Black Film Festival Coordinator Ingrid Brown spoke of commitment to be more active and involved in the community.

    Nashville’s branch leader said he didn’t hear the President-elect’s name during discussion on voter registration, economic development and job opportunities.

    “It stuck in the throat,” Marshall County Branch President Gary Davis said.

    Bone said Young explained he’s sought to befriend “our so-called enemies and to reach out to those who you think you disagree with. It was certainly a message rooted in hope and love as Dr. King would have said.”

    At the Music City Center, Mayor Megan Barry spoke of youth violence and a summer program to employ 10,000 youth, and provide opportunity and hope, Bone said.

    “The annual MLK Fellowship breakfast is the soul of our law firm,” he said.

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    Clint Confehr

    Clint Confehr — an American journalist since 1972 — first wrote for The Tennessee Tribune in 1999. His news writing and photography in South Central Tennessee and the Nashville Metropolitan Statistical Area began in the summer of 1980. Clint's covered news in several Southern states at newspapers, radio stations and one TV station. Married since 1982, he's a grandfather and is semi-retired from daily news work.

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