| Is Part of Coretta Scott King’s Legacy Being Ignored?
by
Paul Waldman
This
past week, nearly every daily newspaper and television
news show in America included a tribute to Coretta
Scott King. But in all the recounting of her life
and legacy, her struggles and her courage, one item
of particular interest was largely missing: her strong
advocacy for equal rights for gays and lesbians, including
same-sex marriage.
Mrs. King described herself as “an outspoken supporter
of civil and human rights for gay and lesbian people”
and frequently made parallels between the civil rights
struggle of the 1960s and the challenges confronting
gays and lesbians today. She fought for laws banning
discrimination against gays, and against efforts to
amend the Constitution to ban sam-sex marriage. “Like
Martin,” she said, “I don’t believe you can stand
for freedom for one group of people and deny it to
others.”
But you wouldn’t have known it from the obituaries
that ran this week. Most newspapers either ignored
the issue completely or touched on it only in passing,
with a generic sentence mentioning only “equal rights”
and avoiding the contentious issue of same-sex marriage
(the Los Angeles Times and San Francisco Chronicle
were two exceptions). Although Andrew Young described
her gay rights work in an interview on CNN, no other
television network – either cable or broadcast – included
even a single mention of the issue in all their coverage
of Mrs. King’s passing.
This is not to say that the fate of gays and lesbians
was at the center of Coretta Scott King’s life, or
that tributes to her should have focused primarily
on this issue. But given her history – and the fact
that she was a strong moral voice for equality for
gays and lesbians years before many other progressives
stepped up to the plate – one would have thought that
tributes to her life and work would have included
at least a passing mention.
So why was this piece of Mrs. King’s history omitted?
It may be in part because in 2006 we want to believe
that the fight for civil rights is in the past, an
issue that has moved from the realm of contest to
the realm of consensus. After all, even the most conservative
politicians in the land now offer tributes to Coretta
Scott King and her husband. If Congress voted today
on whether to declare Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday
a national holiday, you can bet the measure would
pass unanimously, with no one stepping up to oppose
it, as 90 House members and 22 senators did in 1983
(including then-Wyoming Congressman Dick Cheney).
But discussing Coretta Scott King’s advocacy for
gays and lesbians – and especially her support of
same-sex marriage - pulls this national icon back
into the realm of bitter political debate, casting
her not just as a model of courage, struggle and moral
righteousness but as a participant in one of our most
divisive controversies. Suddenly the civil rights
struggle doesn’t seem like a chapter in our children’s
history books – a fight that is over, and one in which
we all agree who was right and who was wrong. Instead,
it becomes a fight whose echoes continue today in
matters to which all of us do not pay the same lip
service.
Many African-Americans - including many religious
leaders, and even some of Coretta Scott King’s own
children - disagreed strongly with her on the issue
of gay rights. Some bristle at the notion that the
effort to secure full legal and civil rights for gay
Americans is only the latest incarnation of the struggle
for equality that came to a head in the 1960s. We
could – and perhaps we should – have an extended discussion
about the similarities and differences between the
two, and where equality begins and ends. But it is
not too hard to imagine that a few decades from now,
this conflict too will evolve into consensus on which
side was right and which side was wrong. If and when
that happens, it will be in no small part because
those with moral authority, like Coretta Scott King,
took a strong stance knowing that it would not be
popular in all quarters.
Although we have Mrs. King’s assurances on the subject,
we cannot know with absolute certainty whether Martin
Luther King, Jr. would have supported same-sex marriage
or other efforts at equality for gays and lesbians
were he alive today. But there is no doubt where Coretta
Scott King stood on the issue. That is a part of her
legacy, and one that should not be ignored.
Paul Waldman, pictured above, is a senior
fellow at Media Matters for America, a progressive media
watchdog group
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Originally published on Wednesday February 8, 2006.
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