Cornel West said he was 10 years old the first he saw Martin Luther King.
“He was the real thing, and I could feel that in his words. I could feel that in his spirit. I could feel that in his soul as a 10 year old—as a 10 year old—and this as if I was there yesterday,” West said.
Headlining MLK Day 2022 at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga today, West spent 90 minutes speaking and answering questions, including from students at UTC and Chattanooga-based schools. The program was presented fully on Zoom.
A self-described Christian and “non-Marxist socialist,” West is known in news-watching and news-reading circles as a liberal commentator with opinions that can be fiery and controversial. He often discusses topics such as race, gender, politics, equality, social justice and activism.
In his comments about King, West noted that many saw King as a rabble-rousing political activist, but he was a Christian minister first.
“He said, ‘That really means that they’ve never understood me. You never understood my calling. They never understood my vocation. You see, they think I’m a civil rights activist. No, the struggle for freedom around love in order to heal and spread joy means there’s a lot of means (by) which you do that,'” West said.
“I don’t want any young people to think that Martin Luther King Jr. was so popular when he was alive.”
West also weighed in to diversity, inclusion and the role of higher education in promoting civility and wider understanding.
“Students have a much more difficult time connecting with each other because the larger society is so toxic, poisonous in terms of the distrust and the despair about ever making a human connection.
“I want to get some distance from all of this hatred and fear and trauma, but I want to do it in such a way that I’ve got moral and spiritual content, that integrity,” West said. “You ought to be impressed with who you are, that’s your spiritual power. And nobody can take that away from a people, no matter how oppressed they are.”
He praised UTC for its dedication to diversity and inclusion, attracting students, faculty and staff of all races, ethnicities and religions.
“Some folk of all colors who want to tell the truth, not just about race, not just about gender, but about the world, so that you make sure that you can speak to the mental health, the traumas, the crises, the catastrophes that people have had to come to terms with in their own families, in their own communities,” he said.
Along with his political and social consciousness profiles, West also is well-known for his frequent forays into popular culture, including film, TV and music.
He was Councillor West in “The Matrix Reloaded” and “The Matrix Revolutions” films, as well as providing the character’s voice in the “Enter the Matrix” video game. He offers commentary on all three Matrix films in “The Ultimate Matrix Collection” box set.
He has recorded three albums of his own, both spoken word and musical, and made guest appearances on recordings by Prince, Bootsy Collins, Jill Scott, E-40, Andre 3000 and Terence Blanchard.
His remarks on Friday also frequently referenced musical artists and songs in making his points, bringing up the Isley Brothers, Aretha Franklin, Tupac, Duke Ellington, Beethoven, Sly Stone, Anita Baker, Mahalia Jackson, Beethoven and many others to make his points.
Music can bring people together, he said, adding that the United States’ current state of political polarization shouldn’t prevent people with opposing views from being friends.
“We got grandmoms who are conservatives who raised kids who ended up revolutionary. They gonna stop loving their grandmom?
“Love is never reducible to just politics. You have people in your own family who, you know, in so many ways are politically wrong on some issues, and you love them anyway,” he said.
The important thing, no matter what you do, is to find joy in it, he said.
“That’s crucial,” he said. “Joy—deeper joy—is a sparkle in your momma’s eye. Joy is the smile on your child’s face. Joy cuts deeper.”
"Dr. J" Loundmonclay
fyi…
I am a local former head of the Urban League (first woman president of a local Urban League in 1975) who worked indirectly with Martin Luther King, Jr., and President Lyndon Johnson on the Voting Rights act and other civil rights endeavors and would love the opportunity to share my history with UTC students and faculty. Check out my TED talk You-tube presentation and the attached photos of my speech at the Memorial for MLK in Indiana in 1968. Ft. Wayne Indiana Journal Gazette, April 8, 1968
Five Giants: The Unsung Civil Rights Heroes | Juanita Loundmonclay | TEDxChattanooga
89-year-old Great-granddaughter of a slave; survivor of a segregated school system and the violence of poverty by racism to emerge as a Civil Rights mentee, who helped influence a president; served as Vice President of an HBCU (Historically Black college/University) and still working to achieve the rights of others; currently board chair of …
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