King Tells SCLC He's Not His Father

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Martin Luther King III admitted Sunday night that he is not his father.
But he said that wouldn't stop him from leading the civil rights organization founded by his famous father into the 21st century.
``I don't have my father's melodious voice. God only gave South Africa one Mandella. God only gave the United States one Martin Luther King,'' Martin Luther King III told the opening session of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Montgomery on Sunday night.
``God has seen fit to give me just a flicker of the flame. I'm going to let it shine,'' said King, as some of the most prestigious civil rights figures in the country stood behind him and an audience of about 700 waved ``We love you Martin'' signs.
King, 43, opened the convention Sunday night hoping to erase questions about his leadership as president of the organization founded by his father, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., following the Montgomery Bus Boycott in the 1950s.
The SCLC national board of directors had planned to meet with King Sunday afternoon, but that meeting was delayed until Monday so the many ministers on the board would have more time to get to Montgomery following church services.
The convention gives King an opportunity to fight off dissenters in the SCLC, who have reportedly called him an absent, ineffective leader. SCLC board Chairman Claud Young sent King a letter in May citing King's inability to raise money, lack of communication, unexplained stints away from the Atlanta office, and failure to set a clear agenda for the organization, according to published reports.
Young has since said that the matter has been resolved and promised to support the SCLC's leadership during a brief speech Sunday.
King said the internal conflict will not stop the SCLC from continuing his father's fight against social injustice.
``I know the recent challenges have been grave, but we are not going to let anyone turn us around,'' King said. ``While we are busy waging minor fights inside, major fights go on outside.''
King promised the SCLC would struggle against many ills facing blacks and poor Americans including crime, homelessness, hunger and inadequate education.
Key civil rights figures united behind King on the podium including the Rev. Jesse Jackson; King's mother, Coretta Scott King; former United Nations ambassador Andrew Young; and former SCLC President Joseph Lowrey.
``The press is floating around here like buzzards looking for a funeral. We come here looking for the future,'' Jackson said.
Earlier Sunday, Jackson said he hoped the controversy over SCLC leadership will attract more attention to the organization and it's social agenda.
He said he hoped the organization will look at issues of ``economic exploitation,'' such as blacks having to pay more for car and housing loans and many poor people not receiving federal income tax rebates.
``In Alabama, 35 percent of the people didn't get a dime of that money,'' Jackson said.
Alabama SCLC president Charles Steele said Sunday he expects the organization's agenda ``for the next 20 or 30 years'' will be set during the Montgomery convention. He said he expects the economic issues pushed by Jackson will be part of that plan.
``You're going to see a new SCLC come out of this convention. You're going to see a new commitment from the board as well as from President King,'' Steele said.
Georgia state Rep. Tyrone Brooks, a former field director for the SCLC, said he expects the convention to rally around King. He said if there is unhappiness among delegates it is more likely to be with Young, for making an internal dispute public.
He said while the dispute is troubling, it may stimulate debate and interest at the convention.
``This may be a blessing in disguise. It will force the SCLC to take a hard look at itself. We need to support our president,'' Brooks said.
The national convention runs through Wednesday and will include a celebration of enactment of the Voting Rights Act and workshops on issues such as voter registration, reparations and racial profiling.
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Originally published August 05, 2001.