<font color='black' size='2' face='arial'><font size="2">Number four.</font><br>
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From: Jaime R Vergara <pinoypanda2031@aol.com><br>
To: editor <editor@saipantribune.com><br>
Sent: Fri, Aug 22, 2014 3:00 pm<br>
Subject: August 28 for ST<br>
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<div class="MsoNormal"><b>I have a Dream</b></div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">Proprietary
rights on the tape of MLK, Jr.'s <i>I have a
Dream, </i>a speech<i> </i>delivered at the
Lincoln memorial in 1963 was bought by magician David Copperfield, who donated
it to the National Civil Rights Museum to promote King's message of
nonviolence. Copperfield said King
inspired people to dream. "That's too important for one person to
possess," Copperfield said of the recording. "You have to share that with people to
remind as many people as possible of the message."</div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">My youth was shaped
by the same poetry and images. It marked
a turning point in the Civil Rights' movement towards the tactic of active
non-violence, later linked to the war in Southeast Asia to counter racial
persecution off the back of America's dark skinned to the squinty slit eyed
Orientals. </div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">Today marks the 51<sup>st</sup>
year of that speech. It was a year after
that this <i>probinsyanong Pinoyze </i>arrived
in the Midwest of America, starry-eyed about what I thought was already the end
of racial discrimination only to find out that violent defiance over legislated
laws were just beginning.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">George Wallace, a
fellow Methodist (when I still counted myself in the group) and Alabama
Governor who entered office with a liberal record, turned out to be the poster
boy of southern resistance against the abolition of the then recognized laws on
segregation that legitimized white folks being more equal before the law than
their darker skinned fellow citizens.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">Racial
discrimination followed my footsteps, from the benign patronizing kind as well
as the vicious exclusionary variety. My later
primal spouse's mother in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, a white suburb of Chicago at
the time, said of me when her daughter and I started to be more romantically
involved: "Look how dark he is?"
It was a mark of her daughter's progressiveness that she went ahead and
married me anyway, even following my vocational service halfway around the
world!</div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">One of my first LP
albums in '65 was titled "In White America", which had MLK's recorded
<i>I have a Dream</i> speech with other
virulent pronouncements from white supremacist voices. The speech inspired an audience, especially
so when the King's voice was muted by a shot at a Nashville Motel in April
'68. However, the dreaming could not be
stilled; it turned into a process replicated around the globe, later finding a
forgiving voice in the streets of Soweto in South Africa.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">On a sunny February
day in 1968, I joined some students in an all-day, all-night drive from Dallas,
Texas where I attended seminary, to Washington, D.C. to join Civil Rights and
Anti-War activists in a joint march to Arlington Cemetery in protest of the
Vietnam War that was sucking the lifeblood of the nation's resources meant to
fund LBJ's War on Poverty. </div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">King spoke to the
gathered audience at the Presbyterian Church on 13th Street and New York Avenue
describing how the American Dream has been preempted by a policy parading as
patriotism that saw Vietnamese as "gooks" upending the American way
of life with its 'communist' sympathies.
King with dignitaries was locked-in-step in front of marchers, as I,
with my University Press card, took pictures of the fateful march.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">What made this
intensely personal was what happened to me on the day Martin bit a bullet a
month later. I was in a car crash that
knocked me out only to awaken to the heavy fumes of gasoline so I got out of
the back seat and managed to call my school roommate who immediately came to
fetch me. </div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">The natural adrenaline
served me well until 30 minutes into the ride when we drove into the University
campus. I could not move a muscle. I was put on a wheel chair at the infirmary and
I did not recall being dressed to bed. I
woke up feeling groggy and sedated. </div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">It was midnight in
Greensboro, North Carolina where my GF attended College. She phoned in tears bewailing that her city
was in flames as rioting followed King's assassination, doubly mournful to find
out that her BF was in the infirmary from a car accident. My attending nurse who came in to check on
me, who otherwise was just a pleasantly plump addition to the room, when she
heard the news of the death of Martin Luther King, Jr., blurted out the vilest
venom from a racist southern heart: "Thank God, they finally got the
Nigger!"</div>
<div class="MsoNormal"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">Literally a dead
man walking among the living, I girded my soul with MLK's brand of dreaming and
joined a global band of folks who did not hesitate to lay down their being in
the barbwires of history in order to manifest the reality that belonging means
being a part of those who made these truths to be self-evident:</div>
<div class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center"><i>all the goods of the earth
belong to all the people;</i></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center"><i>all the decisions of history belong
to all the people;</i></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center"><i>all the gifts of humanness belong
to all the people;</i></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center"><i>all the earth belongs to all
the people.</i></div>
<div class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center"> </div>
<div class="MsoNormal">A decade of living
a lifestyle reflecting the pronouncement, it finally dawned on me, horror of
horrors, that the earth, the people, and I, are one! To love the earth, one took the planet and
all its creatures as one's self.</div>
<br>
<div style="clear:both"><i>j'aime la vie</i><br>
<a href="mailto:pinoypanda2031@aol.com">pinoypanda2031@aol.com</a><br>
<div><i>yesterday, appreciate; tomorrow, anticipate; today. participate. In all, celebrate!</i></div>
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