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Pleas for Humanity Echo in King's Name
Diamond Robinson, 5, walks with parishioners from Tenth Street Baptist Church in Northwest Washington to the African American Civil War Memorial.
(By Michael Robinson Chavez -- The Washington Post)
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Prince George's County Executive Jack B. Johnson (D) took the same stage later and told about 850 parishioners that he studied King's speeches and learned that King "loved that God used ordinary people to do miraculous things."
U.S. Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, the first Hispanic person to hold the job, received a standing ovation from 1,200 people at a King celebration at the Marriott Wardman Park Hotel in Northwest.
Although the Justice Department has drawn mixed reviews for its work in fighting discrimination, Gonzales heard no criticism from a generally receptive audience.
"I care about civil rights in America," he said, and added, "There is work left undone in securing the voting rights of all Americans."
The nation's top law enforcement official recalled that his mother, a child of poor migrant workers, was once denied entry to a Texas cafe "because of her race" and did not vote until she was 50. But later, she was able to "walk in the front door of the White House to visit the president."
At Tenth Street Baptist Church, Fauntroy was the keynote speaker at the interfaith service that attracted several hundred people.
"Martin Luther King was, first and foremost, a minister of the gospel," Fauntroy said. "Religion is a system of values that gives purpose to one's life. That's what Judaism is to Jews. That's what Hinduism is to Hindus. It is a unifying system that gives purpose to life.
"He understood that all Christians, all Jews and all Muslims serve one god," Fauntroy said of King, who was assassinated April 4, 1968, in Memphis.
The bands that play in the city's parade honoring King, traditionally held on the holiday, were absent from the streets of Southeast Washington yesterday. The event has been moved to April 8 so people don't have to worry about frigid weather.
At La Fontaine Bleu in Lanham, several hundred people took part in the 12th annual Martin Luther King Jr. breakfast, sponsored by the Ebony Scholarship Society. Oxon Hill High School's Advanced Ensemble performed "Battle Hymn of the Republic," bringing attendees to their feet.
"We want the legacy of King to be remembered forever and ever," said the Rev. Artie L. Polk, founder of the scholarship society. "That's important. And unless we encourage our young people to do this, they will not remember."
Maryland Sen. Nathaniel Exum (D-Prince George's), referred to young people in the audience when he said: "My hope is that they learn more about the man and what he stood for -- not just for African Americans. There was more to Doctor King than just an 'I Have a Dream' speech."
In Bethesda, Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) and Montgomery County planning officials took part in a ceremony at an 18th-century house with an attached log cabin that once belonged to Josiah Henson, the slave whose autobiography probably inspired Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
Officials plan to restore the one-acre site on a former tobacco plantation that contains the cabin, which is not yet open to the public. Greg Mallet-Prevost, whose family bought the property in the 1960s, sold it to Montgomery County for $1 million. Mallet-Prevost attended the ceremony.
"Slavery is our legacy -- it is my legacy, it is your legacy -- and it is part of us every single day," he said. Rather than "walk through our lives with anger" or shame, he said, people should "walk through [their] lives and learn from past experiences."
Staff writers Paul Duggan, Tom Jackman and Matthew Mosk and the Associated Press contributed to this report.







