NYC★ WORKS 
 CELEBRATING LABOR IN THE BIG APPLE 
 MLK’s legacy: Support of  
 labor union movement 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   JAN. 31-FEB. 6, 2020 19  
 BY: NELSON KING 
 As  American  celebrated  
 the birthday  
 of  slain  civil  rights  
 leader, the Rev. Dr. Martin  
 Luther King, Jr., it  
 is important to examine  
 King’s  role  in  the  labor  
 union movement.  
 While researching at  
 the  Martin  Luther  King  
 Center in Atlanta, Ga in  
 1992, Michael Honey, a  
 Washington University  
 professor,  found what  the  
 Atlantic describes as “an  
 inconspicuous folder”  
 labeled “King’s Labor  
 Speeches.”  
 The publication said  
 Honey opened the folder  
 and  found  “a  trove  of  
 King’s addresses to labor  
 unions and workers’  
 rights coalitions, most  
 of which had never been  
 published.” 
 Honey subsequently  
 edited,  and  released  by  
 Beacon  Press,  “All  Labor  
 Has  Dignity”:  King’s  
 Speeches on Labor. 
 “The  book  shows  an  
 eerily prescient Dr. King,  
 a  clear-eyed  visionary,  
 who  speaks  prophetically  
 about  the host  of  issues  
 facing our nation today,” 
  said the Atlantic in  
 an article, written by Joe  
 Fassler, on Feb. 22, 2011.   
 “In the eloquent,  
 mythic language for  
 which he is famous, King  
 lambastes economic  
 forces growing the gap between  
 rich and poor, the  
 massive tax resources  
 used  for  war  spending  
 while domestic programs  
 languished, and the kneejerk  
 demonizing of progressive  
 social  reform  
 as ‘communist,’” said  
 Fassler,  editor  of  “Light  
 the Dark: Writers on Creativity, 
  Inspiration and  
 the Artistic Process.” 
 Fassler, who also interviews  
 writers  for  The  Atlantic’s  
 “By Heart” series,  
 said King even criticized  
 conservative  senators,  
 calling them “Neanderthals,” 
  who “abused their  
 filibuster privilege to  
 block meaningful legislative  
 change.”  
 “The collection demonstrates  
 that historical considerations  
 of  Dr.  King’s  
 contributions have overlooked  
 his dogged dedication  
 to the organized labor  
 movement and his fight  
 on  behalf  of  the  working  
 poor  across  racial  divides,” 
  said Fassler, who  
 spoke with Honey about  
 King’s work for workers’  
 rights, the historical context  
 of  the  speeches  and  
 the  relevance  of  King’s  
 conclusions to ongoing  
 21st-century American labor  
 disputes. 
 Honey said the book  
 contains  15  different  
 documents,  from  1957  to  
 1968, which “present a  
 somewhat different side  
 of  King  that  most  people  
 don’t know about.  
 “Almost all of these  
 speeches are unknown  
 to the general public,”  
 he said. “Until recently,  
 King’s economic justice  
 platform and his relationship  
 with workers and  
 unions has been an almost  
 entirely neglected topic.”  
 Honey said the civil  
 rights movement was not  
 just about civil rights – it  
 was about human rights,  
 adding “that means labor  
 rights.” 
 He said the book is “really  
 about a period when  
 King was trying to use  
 the momentum of the civil  
 rights  movement  to  help  
 the labor movement, the  
 cause  of  public  employee  
 workers and people in the  
 service economy. 
 “And those are the areas  
 where  unions  have  
 grown tremendously in  
 the last 20 or 30 years – in  
 part because of Dr. King’s  
 sacrifice  in  Memphis  
 (TN),” he said.  
 Honey told Fassler  
 that Dr. King made these  
 speeches  to  the  strong  
 unions,  at  that  time,  so  
 they could “donate money  
 to the civil rights movement, 
  which was an  
 emerging movement.” 
 He said King made an  
 interesting  plea:  “You  
 have a lot more power  
 than we do, but we have  
 the moral agenda and the  
 attention  of  the  nation  
 that you’re losing.  
 “King wanted to convince  
 the unions  that  the  
 civil rights movement was  
 not only important on its  
 own but that its success  
 was crucial to the labor  
 movement’s success, too,”  
 Honey said.  
 In a 1968 speech, he  
 noted that King asked:  
 “What does it profit a man  
 to  be  able  to  eat  at  an  integrated  
 lunch  counter  if  
 he doesn’t earn enough  
 money to buy a hamburger  
 and a cup of coffee?” 
 “He did say that the civil  
 rights that we’d attained  
 from Brown v. Board of  
 Education to the Civil  
 Rights and Voting Rights  
 Acts were a remarkable  
 change,” Honey said. “But,  
 after that, he really did emphasize  
 economic issues.” 
   The  Washington  University  
 professor  said  urban  
 areas were, at the  
 time, exploding all across  
 the  country,  with  riots,  
 police brutality and National  
 Guard  occupation  
 of black communities. 
 “The fact was, in the  
 urban areas, civil rights  
 didn’t  do  anything  to  
 change the economic situation  
 for the mass of working  
 class people,” he said.  
 “Those  were  people  
 that  should  have  had  
 COURTESY OF LOCAL 32BJ SEIU’S ALL LABOR HAS DIGNITY’ RALLY.  
 
				
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