Xandr Brown: As non-violent as MLK was, make no mistake, he was a threat

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Video transcript

Hi, I’m Xandr Brown, a producer with the Daily Yonder, and welcome to the home office.

I’ve been doing some reshuffling and have been acutely aware of how many books I have.

Most of these books have sat on the shelves of my grandparents house and now they have followed me here. In light of the commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr Day and the fast approaching Black History month, the book Why We Can’t Wait by Martin Luther King, Jr. caught my eye. I realized I had never really read Martin Luther King Jr.  

It’s strange to have learned so much about a person, through school and college courses and never met his words face to face. 

So I made the plunge, wondering if I would take anything new from his words besides the kumbaya that usually frames his birthday. I did, and reading him stirred thoughts that have been on my mind for a while.

I think reflection is necessary. I’m sure many of us have done a lot of that in these uncertain times. Whether we were ready for it or not, Covid forced us to confront the ways we arch our lives toward convenience, existing to be convenient, and when we are no longer such, discarded. 

Every January without fail, folks seem to water down the potency of disruption that Martin Luther King Jr. was.

Every January without fail, folks seem to water down the potency of disruption that Martin Luther King Jr. was. 

He’s flattened on murals and street signs that some joke are in the roughest parts of America. On the internet and in discourse, he is arranged as the reasonable way of making a difference, of making change without being a vagabond, thug, or rioter. 

In his book he writes, “No one can pretend that because a people may be oppressed, every individual member is virtuous and worthy. The real issue is whether in the great mass the dominant characteristics are decency, honor, and courage.” 

Descriptors like “decency,” “ honor,” or “courage” aren’t synonymous with fealty to the law. 

Martin Luther King Jr. never was a law-abiding citizen. 

Martin Luther King Jr. was a jailbird, and in his call for nonviolence, he encouraged others to willingly go to jail as well. He was a thorn in the side of the left and right alike. He called for unity of the working class black and white and critiqued the elitism of W.E.B. Dubois’ “talented tenth.” He was on the watch list of the FBI. In fact, in 1964, the same year this book was published, the FBI sent a blackmail package to his home in an attempt to destroy his character, undermine the movement, and ultimately make him commit suicide.

Non violent as he was, make no mistake he was a threat. 

He called for disruption, a fight against convenience—a fight against going quietly into that good night. Sit-ins, marches, and boycotts of businesses big and small. 

He was a threat to the convenience of keeping things the same and doing just enough to keep the peace. The convenience of being able to live with laws, one may never feel the true affect of. In my view, he represents the fight against the kind of convenience of tokenizing his words without ever having read him. 

Martin Luther King Jr. defied police forces, sat in jail many times and led protests that today would have people raging in the driver’s seat stuck in traffic. 

You don’t have to hurt someone to be a threat. Just like you don’t have to be a slave to be a convenience. You simply have to stop looking, stop questioning, stop wondering about what is going on right in front of you.

So I ask you, on this Martin Luther King Jr. Day, in what ways have you served convenience and how can you find community enough to be a positive disruption?

Xandr Brown with cameraXandr Brown is a multimedia producer for the Daily Yonder. In 2018, she graduated undergrad from the University of Rochester in upstate New York in History and Communications with a minor in Environmental Humanities. She is currently based in Michigan’s Flint-area where she previously reported with hyperlocal newsrooms, Flintside.com and Flintbeat.com. Her talents include singing/songwriting and a pretty convincing Obama impersonation. When she’s not falling down a Youtube rabbit hole, she likes to read and write stories that she hopes to get published one day.

Get stories, videos, and interviews from across rural America in your inbox each week from the Rural Assembly by signing up for our newsletter. 

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