Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Martin Luther King Day today in US - Delanceyplace excerpt


In today's encore excerpt - Mike King changes his name. Born Michael Luther King (1899 - 1984), he had lifted himself up from extreme poverty and a complete lack of schooling to lead Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, and to take it from the brink of financial ruin to prosperity - in the bleak middle of the Depression.  His eldest son, Michael Luther King Jr., who we now remember as Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929 - 1968), was then known as 'M.L.' or 'Little Mike'. The change was intended to honor Martin Luther (1483 - 1546), the great German founder of the "protestant" reformation of Christianity in the 1500s - and thus elevate Mike and his son through that association:

"He was simply Mike King - always shaking hands, encouraging and demanding, making himself the center of attention in any room, full of claims about the past and promises for the future. The key to his multiple roles and identities was always Ebenezer Church. ... He could safely say that he rescued Ebenezer Baptist Church from bankruptcy within his first few months as pastor. Membership increased geometrically from two hundred toward a Depression peak of four thousand.  His gamble paid off so handsomely that the church made him the highest-paid Negro minister in Atlanta at the end of his first year. (He) asked his membership to send him on a summer-long tour of Europe, Africa and the Holy Land. Reverend King's triumphant homecoming in late August 1934 was announced to Negro Atlanta in a banner headline in the Daily World: 'Reverend King is Royally Welcomed on Return from Europe.'

"This was King's moment, the watershed of his life, and he honored the occasion by changing his name from Michael to Martin, becoming Martin Luther King. For consistency, he also changed the name of his older son to Martin Luther King, Jr. The change of name was one of the most important events in the (five-year-old) King's early life."

Author: Taylor Branch  
Title: Parting the Waters
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Date: Copyright 1988 by Taylor Branch
Pages: 43-44
Parting the Waters : America in the King Years 1954-63
by Taylor Branch by Simon & Schuster
Paperback ~ Release Date: 1989-11-15



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Delanceyplace is a brief daily email with an excerpt or quote we view as interesting or noteworthy, offered with commentary to provide context.  There is no theme, except that most excerpts will come from a non-fiction work, mainly works of history, are occasionally controversial, and we hope will have a more universal relevance than simply the subject of the book from which they came. 

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