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King, in Word and Stone
Martin Luther King’s monument is a proper, if imperfect, tribute.

By Charles Krauthammer


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It is one of the enduring mysteries of American history — so near-providential as to give the most hardened atheist pause — that it should have produced, at every hinge point, great men who matched the moment. A roiling, revolutionary 18th-century British colony gives birth to the greatest cohort of political thinkers ever: Jefferson, Adams, Madison, Hamilton, Washington, Franklin, Jay. The crisis of the 19th century brings forth Lincoln; the 20th, FDR.     

Equally miraculous is Martin Luther King Jr. Black America’s righteous revolt against a century of post-emancipation oppression could have gone in many bitter and destructive directions. It did not. This was largely the work of one man’s leadership, moral imagination, and strategic genius. He turned his own deeply Christian belief that “unearned suffering is redemptive” into a creed of nonviolence that he carved into America’s political consciousness. The result was not just racial liberation but national redemption.     

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Such an achievement, such a life, deserves a monument alongside the other miracles of our history — Lincoln, Jefferson, and FDR — which is precisely where stands the new Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial. It opened Monday on the Tidal Basin, adjacent to Roosevelt’s seven acres, directly across from Jefferson’s temple, and bisecting the invisible cartographic line connecting the memorials for Jefferson and Lincoln, authors of America’s first two births of freedom, whose promises awaited fulfillment by King.     

The new King memorial has its flaws, mostly notably its much-debated central element, the massive 30-foot stone carving of a standing, arms-crossed, somewhat stern King. The criticism has centered on origins: The statue was made in China by a Chinese artist. The problem, however, is not ethnicity but sensibility. Lei Yixin, who receives a government stipend, has created 150 public monuments in the People’s Republic, including several of Chairman Mao. It shows. The flat, rigid, socialist-realist result does not do justice to the supremely nuanced, creative, humane soul of its subject.     

The artistic deficiencies, however, are trumped by placement. You enter the memorial through a narrow passageway, emerging onto a breathtaking opening to the Tidal Basin, a tranquil tree-lined oasis with Jefferson at the far shore. Here stands King gazing across to the Promised Land — promised by that very same Jefferson — but whose shores King himself was never to reach. You are standing at America’s Mount Nebo. You cannot but be deeply moved.     

Behind the prophet, guarding him, is an arc of short quotations chiseled in granite. This is in keeping with that glorious feature of Washington’s monumental core — the homage to words (rather than images of conquest and glory, as in so many other capitals), as befits a nation founded on an idea.     

The choice of King quotations is not without problems, however. There are 14 quotes, but in no discernible order, chronological or thematic. None are taken from the “I Have a Dream” speech for understandable reasons of pedagogical redundancy. Nevertheless, some of the quotes are simply undistinguished, capturing none of the cadence and poetry of King’s considerable canon.     

More troubling, however, is the philosophical narrowness. The citations dwell almost exclusively on the universalist element of King’s thought — exhortations, for example, that “our loyalties must transcend our race, our tribe, our class, and our nation; and this means we must develop a world perspective,” and “every nation must now develop an overriding loyalty to mankind as a whole.”     

Transcending all forms of sectarianism to achieve a common humanity was, of course, a major element of King’s thought. But it was not the only one. Missing is any sense of King’s Americanness. Indeed, the word America appears only once, and only in the context of stating his opposition to the Vietnam War. Yet as King himself insisted, his dream was “deeply rooted in the American dream.” He consciously rooted civil rights in the American story, not just for tactical reasons of enlisting whites in the struggle but because he deeply believed that his movement, while fiercely adversarial, was quintessentially American, indeed, a profound vindication of the American creed.     

And yet, however much one wishes for a more balanced representation of King’s own creed, there is no denying the power of this memorial. You must experience it. In the heart of the nation’s capital, King now literally takes his place in the American pantheon, the only non-president to be so honored. As of Aug. 22, 2011, there is no room for anyone more on the shores of the Tidal Basin. This is as it should be.

—  Charles Krauthammer is a nationally syndicated columnist. © 2011, The Washington Post Writers Group

EDITOR’S NOTE: This article has been amended since its original posting.

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COMMENTS   32

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Jodie Pessolano
   08/26/11 05:33

The two quintessential quotes from Dr. King:

"I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal."

"A just law is a man made code that squares with the moral law or the law of God. An unjust law is a code that is out of harmony with the moral law."

The former, a challenge for us to live up to our American idea. The latter, an acknowledgment that God's eternal law is any nation's plumb line.

Apparently, neither made the cut, as American idealism and reference to the Almighty no longer passes artistic muster.

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   08/26/11 09:00

Reflecting Dr. King's vision of a "common humanity" would seem to require a simpler, more approachable monument. From what's been shown in the media, this monument seems to have sacrificed that critical attribute for a sternness that belies the message.

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   08/26/11 11:53

On further review, it also seems to be a bad knockoff of the work of Lorado Taft.

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   08/26/11 09:00

Up until the very last line this article displays the true conservative senitivities and shows why Dr. Krauthammer must be considered one of our best and brightest spokesmen.

However, "As of Aug. 28, 2011, there is no room for anyone more on the shores of the Tidal Basin. This is as it should be." Sorry, I must disagree. This is very shortsighted.

While I have every hope that in the future we will never have situations that will call for such a man of courage, the future is uncertain at best. Unfortunately I have every reason to believe we will have need of such men at times, and honoring them with equal distinction will be the right thing to do.

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Bill Wilde
   08/26/11 09:17

What a terrific essay, Mr. Krauthammer. Thank you, Bill

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John Walker
   08/26/11 09:45

Once Frederick the Great was teasing Voltaire and demanded that Voltaire come up with a proof of the existance of God. Voltaire thought a moment and then exclaimed. "That is easy Sire, The Jews". Dr. Franklin met Voltaire briefly before he died in 1778. His intuition failed to recognize a new proof of God's existance when the revolutionary Franklin paid him a courtesy visit.

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MPM62
   08/26/11 10:20

Is it just me or does the statue in pose and likeness look more like Mao than MLK?

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   08/26/11 11:34

Two blights on the monument:
1. The greed of the King family, which demanded an outrageous licensing fee from a group trying to honor their patriarch.
2. The Chinese origin of the artwork, and the accompanying lack of American feel to the statue.

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   08/26/11 11:49

It is a bitter, tragic irony that no one will articulate, that the brilliant, noble, heroic life's work of Martin Luther King, which should have led to the completion and perfection of the American Dream, resulted instead in the most divisive, destructive and un-American presidency in our nation's history. None can doubt that without Dr. King, Barack Obama would never have become president; but there is grave doubt that our Republic can survive Obama's presidency, particularly if he secures a second four-year term to complete his assault on the Constitution.

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   08/26/11 11:57

Whatever one may think about King and his legacy, memorializing him in a white statue and giving him Chinese features is either hilarious or offensive.

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TooCon
   08/26/11 12:18

It looks like Mao Tse Tung or Buddha in blackface.

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   08/26/11 12:50

What the heck is FDR doing on that list? I thought Charles Krauthammer was an exceedingly intelligent and thoughtful man...but instead it looks like he's accepted this orthodoxy that Franklin Roosevelt's authoritarian rule helped the economy. After all, what could possibly be wrong with taking resources away from the private sector to pay someone to dig up a whole before lunch and then fill it up afterward? What does it matter if you're producing wealth, as long as you're "creating jobs?" Really, Dr. Krauthammer, I'm very disappointed by the inclusion of FDR on your list. In fact, he made the Great Depression MUCH WORSE.

And, in our time of crisis today, what great man has stepped forward? Rick Perry? Good Lord. Our presidential election system has become so flawed that all the good men who are really fit for the job - Mitch Daniels, Chris Christie (I'm suspicious of Paul Ryan for voting for Medicare Part D and other Bush era Big Government) do not want to run. This hardened atheist does not feel doubt at all. The doubt should be felt by the hardened religionists.

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rachelle
   08/26/11 19:09

Exactly right. All too often Dr. K shows his true self and he is no conservative. He despises the vernacular, truly American impulse that many of us find so admirable in Sarah Palin and talks of the miserable FDR as a great man? Dr. K, we see you for what you are and from now one you are off my list of great men and consigned to the ash bin. Run Sarah! Show them what America really can produce when the going gets tough and believe me it isn't a made in China monstrosity that evokes praise of FDR.

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Larry Brown
   08/26/11 12:56

What's wrong with you, Dr. Krauthammer, can't bring yourself to even once call your hero "Dr.?" Although you seem to have bought into the cult of this person lock, stock and barrel, can't you show some respect?

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JM
   08/26/11 15:38

Admiring King renders a person a cult-dweller?

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Larry Brown
   08/26/11 17:07

It's more than just "admiring" this person; just reflect on the cult of our current president. Also, see what happens to anyone who dares to criticize the memory of he who can't be criticized. No other deceased American is so protected by the forces of political correctness.

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JM
   08/27/11 18:15

I don't disagree that the forces of political correctness protect MLK's legacy to an absurd degree, but that's not MLK's fault. Based upon what I know about him (warts and all) there still is much to admire.

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Jerry Brown
   08/28/11 21:21

Under the normal rules of etiquette, only a physician uses the title of “Doctor.” Others are properly addressed by Mister or any other title which they might possess (Except Doctor}.

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   08/26/11 13:02

Looks like a giant hood ornament to me.

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Redford1
   08/26/11 13:21
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