A University of Maryland Global Campus event to honor the civil rights legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. spotlighted the rich personal recollections of Juandalynn Abernathy, the daughter of one of Kingâs closest friends and partners in the civil rights movement.
Abernathy is the oldest daughter of civil rights leader Ralph David Abernathy, who was one of the strategists of the yearlong Montgomery Bus Boycott. He was also Kingâs successor as president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which organized some of the civil rights movementâs most iconic nonviolent protests.
Juandalynn Abernathy
During Wednesdayâs webinar, which was part of the universityâs Martin King Luther Jr. Day activities, Abernathy talked about the man she called âUncle Martinâ and detailed the deep friendship between the Abernathy and King families. She noted that her father was an early driver of the effort to name a national holiday in Kingâs honor.
Abernathy also discussed what she described as the âvery scaryâ complacency and current backsliding on voting rights in the United States.Â
âIf people do not come together to fight this, weâre going to have a similar situation that we had in the â50s,â she said. She encouraged both activism and education.
âThere is hope, there is really hope, but we have to begin ⊠with children. They are the future. We, as parents, have to talk to [young people], to open their minds to history so that history does not repeat itself,â Abernathy told the nearly sixty people in Europe, Asia and the United States who joined the ĐÒžŁ±Š”Œșœ discussion.
The event was hosted in Germany, where Abernathy lives and works as a singer and vocal coach.
UMGC Europe Vice President and Director Tony Cho said presentations like Abernathyâs not only offer a rare look at the personal experiences that mark moments in history, but they also underscore an essential responsibility of education.
âAs an educational institution, we have a role in keeping history relevant,â he explained. Â
Abernathy, born in 1954, described herself as the first child of the civil rights movement. She lived in a house where the changemakers of the era held meetings. Kingâs year-younger daughter Yolanda was her friend and playmate.
Abernathyâs childhood edged up against some of the countryâs most transformativeâand tragicâmoments, including Kingâs 1968 assassination. Her father was with King in Memphis to provide support to striking sanitation workers at the time of the shooting. Â Â
âI do remember my father taking me to school before he got on the plane to go to Memphis and I asked him when he was coming back,â Abernathy recalled. âHe had a strange look on his face. âI donât know. This is a really tough fight. And I donât know when weâll be back.â
âAnd a couple of days later Uncle Martin was shot,â she said.
Abernathy was on a phone call with Yolanda King when she learned about the shooting. Another friend had called in on one of other phone lines in the Abernathy house and told her to turn on the television.
Immediately the Abernathy house became a hub of action, with people at the door and the telephones ringing.
âI kept praying that he would survive the shooting,â she said. She called Kingâs death âdevastatingâ for her family.
During her presentation, Abernathy reminded the audience that the civil rights movement was started by âenergy generated from women,â referring to the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the women who refused to ride the buses to their jobs. She said her mother typed lettersâand paid young boys to distribute themâto let people know of the boycott.
She also discussed her fatherâs arrests, the bombing of the Abernathy home and her fatherâs calling as a pastor, like King. Unlike King, however, she said her father insisted that his children be present at important marchesâexcept in Birmingham. âWe used to say as children that it was âBombinghamâ because so many bombings were taking place,â she noted.
Tucked in with the serious memories were happy ones. She recalled the first time she took a plane with her family. They traveled to Los Angeles where they went to the worldâs fair and saw the opening of the movie, A Raisin in the Sun, starring Sidney Poitier. She also mentioned two summer vacations at Coney Island with the King family.
UMGC Collegiate Associate Professor of History Michael Mulvey kicked off the virtual presentation by detailing Kingâs connection to Europe, starting with Kingâs fatherâs 1934 trip to Germany where he learned of the religious reformer Martin Luther. At that time, owing to Kingâs fatherâs admiration of Lutherâs story, the child who had been christened Michael, had his name changed to Martin Luther.
As an adult and religious leader, King returned to Europe and Germany multiple times, Mulvey said. The civil rights leader visited both East Berlin and West Berlin to spread messages of reconciliation, democracy, and nonviolent resistance. Mulvey said King was surprised by how much Europeans knew about the civil rights movement. He was also interested in understanding the shifting social concerns of European Christians and how they tied their religious beliefs into other social movements including environmentalism.
Patricia Jameson, ĐÒžŁ±Š”Œșœ director of Overseas Diversity and Equity Programs, organized the event with Abernathy to advance the public conversation focused on diversity and the role the community can play. She echoed the speakerâs message that âeducation is keyâ to social progress.
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