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Letter: Kings speech still resonates today for its substance and style
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As we celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s birthday, let’s honor the power of his rhetoric and his movement by focusing on the five reasons his “I Have a Dream Speech” became history-changing.

One major reason: King’s life was consistent with his rhetoric. He did what he encouraged others to do. Surrounded by threats, bullied by hecklers and racist law officers, he endured arrest, followed Gandhi’s example of nonviolence, and ultimately gave his life in the advancement of civil rights.

Second: The speech still resonates because of King’s vivid illustrations. We have come to our nation’s Capitol to cash a check, he said. Yet the nation’s response to promises of justice was marked insufficient funds. Even so, he said, we refuse to believe that the bank of justice is bankrupt.

Third: Dr. King used catchy, attention-riveting words. Grand example: Noting that blacks were stranded on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean of material prosperity.

Fourth: King spoke with stirring emotion. His pulsating emotion emerged naturally from his genuinely intense belief in his message. In the magic of the moment, he departed from his prepared text to speak directly from his heart.

Fifth: He sustained magnetism because his theme was consistent. He allowed no room for partial, delayed solutions to segregation. Compromise was not in his vocabulary as a leader.

Yes, because Dr. King lived the message he spoke, used vivid illustrations, coined creative words and phrases, spoke with obviously genuine emotion and stuck to a consistent, unwavering theme, commemorating his “I Have a Dream” speech on the anniversary of his birth is more than justifiable — it is morally imperative.

Bill Lampton
Gainesville

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