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SOUTHBOUND
Mike Randle, Editor
"I Have a Dream" -- Martin, Your Dream is Being
Realized in the American South
I listened carefully to Martin Luther King's "I have
dream" speech late in the evening of Monday, January
21. It was the first time I had heard it in its entirety.
It looked to be about 15 minutes long and was much less emotional
in the beginning than in the end. But the end of his famous
speech, made on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial on August
28, 1963, was magical.
King began his speech by saying, "Five score years ago,
a great American, in whose symbolic shadow we stand, signed
the Emancipation Proclamation." A few sentences later,
King said, "One hundred years later, the Negro lives
on a lonely island of poverty in the midst of a vast ocean
of material prosperity."
The speech motivated me to such a great degree that the next
morning I immediately wanted to know just how far African
Americans had come economically since King's remarkably emotional
display. I began my research by trying to find out how black
poverty in the U.S. compared to white poverty in 1963, the
year of King's speech. I found that the federal government
had no data on poverty levels of blacks in 1963. It was as
if they didn't exist. It wasn't until 1966 that the feds tracked
income and poverty among black Americans. I guess the laws
outlined in the 1964 Civil Rights Act included not being discriminated
by the Census Bureau as well.
In 1966, 42 percent of African Americans were at or below
the poverty level in this country. In 1968, when King was
murdered, the percentage of blacks in poverty dropped to 34
percent. In 1992, when Clinton was elected and almost 30 years
after King made his "I have a dream" speech, the
percentage of blacks -- those who were barely earning enough
to buy "sleeps and eats" -- remained very high at
31.3 percent.
Something very interesting happened with black poverty rates
in 1994. For the first time ever, African Americans in the
South were faring better than blacks in the Midwest and about
the same as those in the Northeast. That year, poverty rates
for African Americans in the Midwest were at 35.2 percent,
much higher than the 30.1 percent in the South. The Northeast's
poverty rate for blacks then was 29.7 percent.
Now let's jump to 2002. The latest figures available (March
2001) show the national average of African Americans at or
below the poverty level is 22 percent, almost 10 points below
1992 levels and about half that of 1966. Have black Americans
come far enough in this country since the "I have a dream"
speech? No. Have they come far? Absolutely, and all people
in the nation should be proud of Dr. Martin Luther King. He
is a true American hero and his spirit is one of the primary
reasons African Americans in this country have made such a
dramatic economic turnaround. It should also be noted that
the greatest drop in black poverty in the history of this
country came during President Clinton's watch.
During King's speech, the only three states mentioned and
targeted for equal rights were Georgia, Mississippi and finally,
Alabama, my home state. Here's what King said about the aforementioned
Southern states: "I have a dream that one day on the
red hills of Georgia the sons of former slaves and the sons
of former slave owners will be able to sit down together at
a table of brotherhood. I have a dream that one day even the
state of Mississippi, a desert state, sweltering with the
heat of injustice and oppression, will be transformed into
an oasis of freedom and justice. I have a dream that one day
the state of Alabama, whose governor's lips are presently
dripping with the words of interposition and nullification,
will be transformed into a situation where little black boys
and black girls will be able to join hands with little white
boys and white girls and walk together as sisters and brothers."
Today, poverty levels of blacks in the South are less than
that found in the Northeast and Midwest. In fact, at 21.4
percent (Midwest: 24.4 percent; Northeast: 22.5 percent; West:
19.6), Southern poverty rates for blacks are below the national
average of 22 percent for the first time in history.
In 2001, 11.1 percent of all Americans were at or below the
poverty level. In 2001, black poverty is double that figure
in this country. Yet, in 1963, when Martin Luther King electrified
this nation with "I have a dream," black poverty
was more than four times that of the national average and
probably (no data exists) six times the South's regional average.
You folks looking to set up shop in the South listen up.
If you ever hear of the South continuing to be (we are easy
targets on this subject) "the bastion of poverty for
blacks in this country," don't believe it. The people
reporting that aren't up to current figures. African American-Southerners
have educated themselves, picked themselves up in the last
four decades and are surpassing their brothers and sisters
to the north in personal and household income gains. The facts
(U.S. Census Bureau) don't lie.
Martin, I have a dream, too. Since the South's black population
has performed so well since your great speech by beating the
national poverty level standard in 2002, I dream of the day
when I see Southern whites beat it as well. White folks in
poverty in the South represent 10.1 percent of their sector.
The national average is 9.1 percent.
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