From President Obama continuing the National Day of Service tradition, to taking the oath of office with his hand on the King family bible, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was an unmistakable presence throughout Inauguration weekend.
Dr. King’s birthday was formally observed Monday and it seems natural that there would be some sort of reference to the civil rights movement during the proceedings in the form of Myrlie Evers-Williams, the widow of Medgar Evers and the former chairwoman of the NAACP, who delivered the inaugural invocation.
Evers-Williams is one of a legion of women whose contribution to the struggle for civil rights too often goes overlooked. She sat at the table on Sunday’s Melissa Harris-Perry when the host said:
“I both love and hate the King memorial. Every time I look at it, I think, ‘Thank goodness it exists,’ and ‘That man did not emerge from a rock!’ He emerged from a movement.”
Why, then, have so many other names been relegated to historical oblivion? Evers-Williams blamed the Fourth Estate, saying that the media decided that Dr. King was the only person of importance in the movement. “When he was killed, the media asked, ‘Who will your leader be?’ My question was, ‘Why not embrace all the others who gave so much, who did so much, and include them in this?’” She then recalled Dr. King stating that he was never alone in his fight, and that “we are all leaders.”
Joy Reid, managing editor at theGrio, remarked that embodying movements in one person made them easier to defeat, and that the media played into that. Wade Henderson of the Leadership Council brought the focus back to women in the movement, who were the “backbone” in various stages of the movement.









