“font-family: Verdana; font-size: 9pt; line-height: 115%;”>He would

be an elder statesman now, a lion in winter, an American hero

perhaps impatient with the fuss being made over his birthday. At

83, he’d likely still have his wits and his voice. Surely, if he

were able, he would continue to preach, and to pray – and to

dream. 

“font-size: 9.0pt; line-height: 115%; font-family: Verdana;”>For

the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., dreaming was not optional. It was

a requirement of citizenship to envision a fairer, more prosperous

nation no longer shackled by racism and poverty. It was a duty to

imagine a world no longer ravaged by senseless wars. His most

famous speech was less an invitation to share his epic dream than a

commandment.

In these sour, pessimistic times, it is important to remember the

great lesson of King’s remarkable life: Impossible dreams can come

true.

“font-size: 9.0pt; line-height: 115%; font-family: Verdana;”>This

is not a partisan message; King was every bit as tough on Democrats

as Republicans. His activism even transcended ideology. His call

for social justice and his opposition to the Vietnam War were

rightly seen as liberal, but his insistence on the primacy of faith

and family was deeply conservative. His birthday is a national

holiday because his words and deeds ennoble us all.

Thinking about King’s legacy reminds me that this is hardly the

first time our society has been bitterly divided and fearful of an

uncertain future. When he led the 1963 March on Washington and gave

his indelible “I Have a Dream” speech, many Southern whites,

including officials, were still determined to resist racial

integration by any means necessary. Many black Americans were fed

up, no longer willing to wait patiently for the rights promised

them under the Constitution.

We were inured to television images that today would be shocking.

Police dogs turned loose on peaceful protesters. Columns of smoke

rising from cities across the land following King’s

assassination.

As he predicted, King did not live to reach the mountaintop. But

his leadership –and that of so many others in the civil rights

movement – set us on a path that changed the nation in ways that

once seemed unimaginable. Racism, sexism and all the other

poisonous -isms have not been eradicated, but they have been

dramatically reduced and marginalized. It is difficult for young

people to believe that overt discrimination – “You can’t have that

job because you’re black” or “I’m going to pay you less because

you’re a woman” – used to be seen as normal.

Today, the nation is suffering what I see as a crisis of

confidence. Economic globalization and advances in productivity

have hollowed out the U.S. manufacturing sector, eliminating

millions of blue-collar jobs. For the first time, parents have to

worry whether their children’s standard of living will decline

rather than improve.

“font-size: 9.0pt; line-height: 115%; font-family: Verdana;”>Demographic

change is about to make this a nation without a white majority; by

the middle of the century, we’ll be an increasingly diverse

collection of racial and ethnic minorities – held together, even

more than in the past, by the ideals of the nation’s founding

documents.

We’re struggling to climb out of the worst recession in decades.

We’re deeply in debt. Most of us agree on the need for a social

safety net but not on how to structure it or how to pay for it. Our

political system is sclerotic if not dysfunctional. The last few

elections have not produced a consensus on the way forward. The

next won’t, either.

I consider myself fortunate that when I’m feeling pessimistic about

all of this, I’m able to visit the new King Memorial that was

dedicated in October. The towering statue of King looks out toward

the Jefferson Memorial, honoring the man whose stirring words now

apply to all Americans, not just a few. Behind King is the Lincoln

Memorial, a tribute to a leader who shepherded the nation through

days much darker than these.

The plaza surrounding King’s statue opens up to the Tidal Basin as

if to demonstrate how our nation, at its best, embraces

possibility.

The first time I visited the memorial, I ran into former Sen.

George Allen from Virginia. He and I disagree on almost everything

– and since he’s running for office again, I’m sure we’ll be on

opposite sides of many issues. But on a crystalline morning, we

were able to stand together, awed by King’s moral vision and

humbled by his challenge: We can be better. We must. We will.

Eugene Robinson’s email address is

eugenerobinson@washpost.com.

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