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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Ernie Suggs

50 years later, pain of MLK's death still haunts Jesse Jackson

ATLANTA _ The Rev. Jesse Jackson and Andrew Young found themselves in familiar but painful territory this weekend _ the balcony of the Lorraine Motel.

It has been nearly 50 years _ April 4, 1968 _ since the two of them stood on that balcony above the prone body of Martin Luther King Jr., pointing in the direction they thought the bullet had come.

"Every time I go to Memphis and go to the balcony, it is always like pulling a scab off the sore," said Jackson. "The wound is not healed. Fifty years later."

Jackson and Young remain two of the dwindling number of witnesses who were with King that day.

Jackson, the founder and president of Rainbow/PUSH, was in Atlanta promoting a conference for his organization, before stopping by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution to do an AJC Sepia Facebook Live about the 50th anniversary of King's death and what comes next.

"In the last years of his life, Dr. King turned his attention to the plague of war, poverty and continued racial injustice," Jackson said. "He understood that the war on poverty had been lost in the jungles of Vietnam.

"The civil rights movement had successfully eliminated legal segregation and won blacks the right to vote. Now it was time to turn to this unfinished business. We should not let the trauma of his death divorce us from the drama of his life, nor the riots that came in reaction to erase the agenda that he put forth for action."

Jackson didn't wear a tie to the meeting. Again, it was familiar. Moments before King's death, he kidded Jackson for not having on a tie as they were on their way to someone's home for dinner.

"I told him that you need an appetite to eat, not a shirt and tie," Jackson said.

Moments later, King was shot.

"It was so instant," Jackson said. "I think Dr. King was gone at that point."

Jackson called King's wife, Coretta Scott King and told her to "take the next thing smokin'."

He also told her that King had been shot in the shoulder.

"I couldn't really say what I had seen," Jackson said.

Jackson said after King's death, those who were left were determined to "not let one bullet kill the movement."

"Many people who resented him as a marcher, raised him up as a martyr," Jackson said. "They rejected him in flesh and blood, but now resurrect him in monument and stone."

He said that has been manifested in the Black Lives Matter movement, as well as the March for our Lives, the recent surge of teen political activism following the Florida school shooting.

"Fifty years later, the idea of multiracial coalition, as opposed to racial nationalism, is true," Jackson said. "You couldn't have had the Olympics in Atlanta if we hadn't a won. You couldn't have the Falcons and Panthers. I couldn't have run in '84. Barack Obama couldn't have run if we hadn't won. All of us have benefited from his work."

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