Letter: 50 years after King and Kennedy, the struggle for rights continues
Published 12:00 am Thursday, June 21, 2018
This year, America and the world marked the 50-year anniversary of the deaths of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy.
In 1968, Dr. King began implementing the core values of the Poor People’s Campaign. At the same time, Bobby Kennedy’s campaign focused on the same principles: Civil rights for all people and the end of the war economy.
We are 50 years down the road, and yet we are still steeped in deepening poverty, systemic racism, attacks on voter rights, ecological devastation, and harsh immigration laws.
A National Call for Moral Revival is in it’s fifth week of 40 days of peaceful direct action at state capitals across the nation every Monday. This week’s action item was on education, jobs with living wages and fair housing.
The campaign will culminate on June 23 in Washington, D.C. Please stand with me and your community to support the goals of this campaign. Go to poorpeoplescampaign.org.
Isaiah 10:1-2: Woe to those who make unjust laws; to those who issue oppressive decrees; to deprive the poor of their rights; and withhold justice from the oppressed of my people; making widows their prey; and robbing the fatherless.
— MT Sidoli
Salisbury