US marks Martin Luther King 'I have a dream' speech
Martin |
The
US will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March for Jobs and
Freedom, the civil rights rally at which Martin Luther King Jr made his
historic "I have a dream" speech.
President Barack Obama is to mark the occasion in Washington DC with an address from the same spot.Members of the King family and veterans of the march will also be present.
Mr Obama, the first black US president, has described the 1963 protest as a "seminal event" in American history.
The march was considered a catalyst for civil rights reforms in the US.
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King's struggle is far from over, his dream not a reality for many”
President Obama is due to deliver
his address at the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall just after an
organised ringing of bells by churches and other groups at 15:00 local
time (19:00 GMT), to mark the exact time that Martin Luther King spoke
on 28 August 1963.
Mr Obama will be joined by former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, as well as prominent African Americans.On Saturday, thousands of people, including King's eldest son, marched to the Lincoln Memorial to mark the milestone anniversary.
Half a century earlier, Martin Luther King had led some 250,000 protesters down the same strip and delivered his famous speech from its steps.
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'I have a dream' revisited
"I have a dream that my four
little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be
judged by the colour of their skin but by the content of their
character," he said, in one of the most celebrated pieces of American
oratory.
His address marked the peak of a series of protests against
racial discrimination that had begun when seamstress Rosa Parks refused
to give up her bus seat for a white passenger in 1955.
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It's a grey, heavy, humid morning at the Lincoln Memorial,
with rain spotting down. The space on either side of the long reflecting
pool is almost empty, but the queues to get into the National Mall are
long.
Up on the Lincoln Memorial, Peter and Paul - what remains of the US folk-singing trio Peter, Paul and Mary - have just gone through a sound check. They sang here on the day 50 years ago. Today they ran through a rather mournful version of Bob Dylan's Blowing in the Wind.
Rain is threatened for much of the day, but it is difficult to see it spoiling the occasion. Many will come to celebrate and commemorate, and you have to wonder what is President Obama thinking as he prepares to stand where Dr Martin Luther King Jr stood half a century ago today.
Up on the Lincoln Memorial, Peter and Paul - what remains of the US folk-singing trio Peter, Paul and Mary - have just gone through a sound check. They sang here on the day 50 years ago. Today they ran through a rather mournful version of Bob Dylan's Blowing in the Wind.
Rain is threatened for much of the day, but it is difficult to see it spoiling the occasion. Many will come to celebrate and commemorate, and you have to wonder what is President Obama thinking as he prepares to stand where Dr Martin Luther King Jr stood half a century ago today.
Her action sparked a bus boycott campaign across Montgomery, Alabama.
King became a dominant force in the movement and so was called on to make the final speech at the march.He advocated the use of non-violent tactics such as sit-ins and protest marches, and was awarded the Nobel peace prize in 1964.
Four years later, his assassination led to mass riots in more than 100 US cities.
In an interview on Tuesday with a radio show, President Obama said he imagines that King "would be amazed in many ways" about the social progress made since that speech.
He cited the prominent role of many African-Americans in the political and business spheres, as well as equal rights before the law.
Mr Obama, whose own oratory has attracted much praise, said his address on Wednesday would not match that by the civil rights leader.
"It won't be as good as the speech 50 years ago," he said. "I just want to get that out there early."
"When you are talking about Dr King's speech at the March on Washington," he added, "you're talking about one of the maybe five greatest speeches in American history."
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