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News / Nation & World

Daughters of MLK, George Wallace, unite for march

The Columbian
Published: March 26, 2015, 12:00am
2 Photos
Photos by BUTCH DILL/Associated Press
A crowd gathers Wednesday at the Alabama State Capitol in Montgomery after a march from Selma to mark the anniversary of the 1965 voting rights march.
Photos by BUTCH DILL/Associated Press A crowd gathers Wednesday at the Alabama State Capitol in Montgomery after a march from Selma to mark the anniversary of the 1965 voting rights march. Photo Gallery

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — The daughters of two major figures of the civil rights era, Martin Luther King Jr. and former Alabama Gov. George Wallace, shared a stage Wednesday on the steps of the Alabama Capitol to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights march.

While their fathers were on opposite sides of history 50 years ago, their two children came together to mark the milestone anniversary.

Bernice King stood near where her father stood in 1965 to read the “How Long, Not Long” address he gave civil rights marchers on March 25, 1965.

“Today, I stand where he could not stand, to synthesize our past with our present and speak those same words that he spoke,” she told the crowd.

In an interview, Bernice King said the commemoration was a reminder of her father’s “prophetic” words. She said the words he spoke to the crowd at the steps 50 years ago are still relevant.

“I think it’s important going forward that we really grab hold to and embrace my father’s nonviolent philosophy and methodology. That’s the way forward for any social change issue in this country,” Bernice King said in an interview.

Peggy Wallace Kennedy acknowledged her father’s place on the wrong side of history, but that he eventually found “a redemption and understanding of the injustice and suffering of inequality” after he was paralyzed by a would-be assassin’s bullet.

Wallace, the former governor, was a segregationist who opposed civil rights in the 1960s but later apologized.

The voting rights march commemoration came on the same day that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a challenge to Alabama legislative districts brought by black lawmakers. Justices said a lower court must take another look at whether Alabama’s Republican-led legislature relied too heavily on race when it redrew the state’s voting districts.

Thousands gathered outside the Alabama Capitol for the final event in a nearly monthlong commemoration. Hundreds retraced the final leg of the 1965 march to the Alabama Capitol. The crowd ranged in age from children being pushed in strollers to people who marched in 1965. The route wound through the city’s historic neighborhoods, including near the spot where Rosa Parks lived and the barbershop where King got his hair cut.

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