Skip to main content
Article
No Easy Walk to Freedom: MLK’s Anti-Racism Crusade Needs to Be Renewed in Today’s World
Salon
  • Julius A. Amin, University of Dayton
Document Type
Editorial
Publication Date
1-16-2017
Abstract

Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was 39 years old when he was assassinated. Schools, streets and children are named in his honor in Africa. In America, he is honored with a public holiday.

All over the world, King is known as someone who fought for human causes. At a time when racial violence and arrogance in the United States and elsewhere is experiencing a rapid resurgence, King’s holiday is a reminder that much needs to be done to create a more inclusive global community.

In America, the past two years have been tumultuous and each day the racial crises multiply. In South Africa, unresolved racial problems and deteriorating economic conditions have created uncertainty. In several other African nations incidents of ethnic conflict have multiplied.

Document Version
Published Version
Comments

Content is licensed with the Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivitaves License. It initially appeared on The Conversation website. Permission documentation is on file.

View the article in Salon online.

Publisher
The Conversation US
Disciplines
Citation Information
Julius A. Amin. "No Easy Walk to Freedom: MLK’s Anti-Racism Crusade Needs to Be Renewed in Today’s World" Salon (2017)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/julius_amin/39/