Honoring the Legacy, Holding the Truth
There’s a quiet temptation, especially during commemorations, to turn our leaders into polished statues—smooth edges, no cracks, no contradictions. But movements aren’t built by perfection. They’re built by people who strive, who learn out loud, who press through their personal problems while continuing the fight for all.
Dr. King was one of those people.
Legacy has never required flawlessness—it has always required courage, clarity, and community, Dr. King strived and accomplished that. It has required people willing to imagine a future that didn’t yet exist and then take steps, toward making it real, while considering the hopes and happiness for all.
Inspiration Doesn’t Have to Be Untouchable
Our inspirations are human. The people who assist us, guide us, and lead us forward carry their own complexities. When we allow room for humanity, we make space for growth. And growth is where real change lives.
There’s an irony here: so much of what we call “history” is just history—until someone decides it shouldn’t be remembered.
We Have Always Kept Our Own Records
Long before textbooks acknowledged us, we remembered ourselves.
We passed stories through kitchens and front porches, through music, sermons, journals, and ritual. We kept names alive. We preserved lessons. We taught resilience as a living practice, not a slogan.
That skill—keeping our own history—has always been one of our greatest strengths. And it still is.
Even as we hoped we were entering a chapter where diversity in history and achievement would be fully understood and protected, recent events have reminded us: we are not quite there yet. Which means the work of remembrance remains sacred.
Celebrate. Record. Repeat.
Honoring Martin Luther King Jr. isn’t just about revisiting a speech or quoting a dream. It’s about continuing the practice of intentional memory. Celebrating those who made moves that changed the nation in positive, courageous ways—and telling those stories clearly, fully, and often.
Because progress doesn’t sustain itself.
Memory does.
Today, we celebrate Dr. King.
Tomorrow, we keep telling the truth.
Always, we carry our history forward—by hand, by heart, by hustle.
