Jerusalem – Martin Luther King Jr.’s Son Champions Father’s Dream For Ethiopian Jews

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    Israeli president Reuven Rivlin meets with Martin Luther King III, son of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King at the president's residence in Jerusalem on April 8, 2016. Photo by Haim Zach/GPO *Jerusalem – The shared humanity and vision of Martin Luther King Jr. and Jewish leaders during the Civil Rights Movement forged a special bond between two alienated peoples in the United States at one of its darkest hours.

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    Over 50 years later, King’s son, Martin Luther King Jr. III, sat beside Natan Sharansky in Jerusalem to further that dream by presenting three Israelis with the 2016 Unsung Hero Awards for championing the rights of the country’s marginalized Ethiopian community.

    The awards come from the Drum Major Institute, a civil rights organization established in 1961 by the senior King and his Jewish advisor, Harry Wachtel. It was later revived in 1999 by Wachtel’s son, William, and King’s son, who serves as president.

    On Sunday morning, King joined forces with Sharansky, chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel, to honor singer Idan Raichel, former Ethiopian Member of Knesset Pnina Tamano-Shata, and journalist Anat Saragusti, for their activism on behalf of Ethiopian Jewish immigrants.

    Noting his incarceration, and the protests in the US that helped eventually set him free while multiple operations to bring thousands of Ethiopians to Israel were being carried out, Sharansky said being with King’s son in Israel felt like coming “full circle.”

    “It is a very symbolic thing, and many people do not know that the leaders who fought for Soviet Jewry in America all came from the Civil Rights Movement,” said Sharansky at the gathering at JA’s headquarters on King George Street.

    “I am very excited by the fact that the first time that this prize of Martin Luther King is given abroad is given by his son here in Israel, and is connected to aliya from Ethiopia in this historical building,” he said.

    “Six years after Operation Shlomo, where thousands and thousands of Ethiopian Jews were taken from the heart of Africa, I was on an airplane too coming to Israel. We can be very proud that we are the only country that took over 100,000 citizens of Africa and brought them here not as slaves, not as refugees, bus as full citizens.”

    Adding that the subsequent integration process has been a “challenging” process, resulting in claims of institutionalized racism by Ethiopian Jews, Sharansky emphasized that true assimilation will only come through dialogue, understanding and tolerance.

    “I am so grateful to the three honorees for the work they are doing to help do this,” he said.

    King, who was 10 years old when his father was assassinated, said he has visited Israel on six occasions.

    “As we talk about human rights in this country, but really globally, my dad’s mission was essentially around the modern civil rights movement,” he said. “He started as a civil rights leader, but I believe he became a human rights leader.”

    Adding that his father’s closest advisors and confidants were Jewish leaders, including Wachtel, whose son William joined King at the ceremony, King said his family’s friendship with the Jewish community has been an enduring one.

    “Most importantly, much of what my dad was able to do was because people like Harry Wachtel… opened their hearts and minds… and all kinds of wonderful things happened so that my dad and his team could be successful and effective in what they were doing,” he said.

    Indeed, King Sr. was so grateful to Wachtel, that his son said he invited him to join him upon accepting the Nobel Prize.

    While not addressing Israel’s Ethiopian community’s many challenges directly, King noted the problems people of color are facing in America, particularly as it relates to ongoing violence between African American communities and police, is often rooted in racism and poverty.

    “There are a lot of issues that are related to poverty in America,” he said. “My dad used to say – and my mom worked throughout her life to eradicate – what they called the triple evils: the evil of poverty, the evil of racism, and the evils of militarism and violence.

    “And somehow, he had the vision to believe that one day we as a society can eradicate those evils. I still believe that it is possible, even in the face of terrorism… So I am here in that spirit as we are here to honor these special honorees today for the work they are doing, to thank them, and to lift them up.”

    Still, Tamano-Shat, who was the first Ethiopian Jew to be elected to the Knesset after being rescued by Israeli soldiers during Operation Moses, noted that there is still much work to be done.

    “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere, these are the inspiring words of Dr. Martin Luther King,” she said.

    “From Martin Luther King I learned that a struggle that is rooted in the love of mankind is destined to succeed… I learned that love is preferable to hate and violence, and when a single voice is heard in the desert, it is our duty to speak out loud again, and again, until it echoes.”

    Tamano-Shata continued: “The fight against racism and discrimination are the cornerstone of a better and more just world.”


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    2 Comments
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    HeshyEkes
    HeshyEkes
    7 years ago

    “many people do not know that the leaders who fought for Soviet Jewry in America all came from the Civil Rights Movement”
    Were these leaders Blacks? Or Jews? Neither one makes sense to me.

    7 years ago

    To #1 - I think that you know the answer. There were many Jews who were involved in the civil rights struggle in the USA; about half of the freedom riders in 1961 were Jews, who were beaten and arrested by the southern officials in various southern states. Unfortunately, many so-called Black leaders today have short memories, pertaining to how the Jews helped them, in their quest for civil rights. A few months ago, when Bernie Sanders pointed out that he was involved in the struggle for civil rights (he even pointed out a video taken in 1963, showing him being arrested at the University of Chicago, because of housing discrimination), he was marginalized by some Blacks in Congress. One of them even stated “I don’t remember seeing him at the March on Washington in 1963”, even though there were 250,000 people there, and Sanders was in fact there. Years ago, a gentile at work stated to me “The gratitude which the Jews got for helping the Blacks, is that you got kicked in your teeth”. In retrospect, he was right.