Today we celebrate the life of an American hero. One day is not enough. I suggest you contemplate Dr. King’s life and accomplishments throughout each year at moments that arise spontaneously whenever you are confronted with racism, sexism, or any other “ism” that makes life small and petty. Think in the Morning congratulates Dr. King with the arresting lyrics and music of Ani Difranco. We also provide you with the Playboy interview of Dr. King by Alex Haley. This 1965 interview with Haley was the longest interview he had ever granted to any publication.
Hello Birmingham
Ani DiFranco
Hold me down
I am floating away
Into the overcast skies
Over my home town
On election day
What is it about Birmingham?
What is it about Buffalo?
Did the hate filled want to build bunkers
In your beautiful red earth
They want to build them in our shiny white snow
And now I’ve drawn closed the curtains
In this little booth
Where the truth has no place to stand
And I am feeling oh so powerless
In this stupid booth
With this useless little lever in my hand
And outside
My city is bracing
For the next killing thing
Standing by the bridge
And praying for the next Doctor Martin Luther King
It was just one shot
Through the kitchen window
Just one or two miles from here
If you fly like a crow
A bullet came to visit a doctor
In his one safe place
A bullet ensuring the right to life
Whizzed past his kid and his wife
And knocked his glasses right off of his face
And the blood poured off the pulpit
Yeah the blood poured down the picket lines
And the hatred was immediate, yeah
And the vengeance was divine
So they went and stuffed God down the barrel of a gun
And after him they stuffed his only son
Hello Birmingham; it’s Buffalo
I heard you had some trouble down there again
Just calling to let to know
That somebody understands
I was once escorted
Through the doors
Of a clinic
By a man
In a bulletproof vest
And no bombs
Went off that day
So I am still here to say
Birmingham
I’m wishing you all of my best
Oh Birmingham
I’m wishing you all of my best
Oh Birmingham
I’m wishing you all of my best
On this election day
Songwriters: Ani Difranco
Hello Birmingham lyrics © A Side Music LLC D/B/A Modern Works Music Publishing
Alex Haley Interviews Martin Luther King, Jr. Former Civil Rights Leader And Activist
(Alex Haley Interviews Martin Luther King, Jr. was originally published in the January 1965 issue of Playboy Magazine. In addition, it was also published within Alex Haley: The Playboy Interviews by Ballantine Books in July 1993.)
Martin Luther King, Jr. (January 15, 1929 – April 4, 1968) was an American clergyman, activist and prominent leader in the African-American civil rights movement. His main legacy was to secure progress on civil rights in the United States, and he has become a human rights icon. This 1965 interview with Haley was the longest interview he had ever granted to any publication.
“Anticipating that Reverend King might have problems reconciling his Baptist faith with the nude photographs in Playboy, I armed Alex with the magazine’s impressive sales figures—more than three million at that time—and he regaled King’s advisors with a demographic breakdown of the readership: college-educated young men and women, ‘the very constituency that was most vital to King’s interests, for anyone with a cause. Think what you will about the girls, but you can’t ignore the audience.’ They were convinced.
“However, King’s schedule made it next to impossible even for a conventional interview, let alone one like Playboy’s that would require many hours of taping. After a succession of frustrating cancellations, and three trips to Atlanta, he still hadn’t met the man, and most interviewers would have given up. But Alex had taken pains to befriend King’s secretary, and finally he threw himself on her mercy. He couldn’t face his editor empty-handed again, he told her, and she sent him to a church barbecue King was attending. ‘Let him see you there, but don’t press,’ she advised. He did as he was told, sitting there with a paper plate of chicken and potato salad until King finally took pity on him and came over to say hello, suggesting that they might talk for a few minutes over in his office.” ~ Murray Fisher—former editor of Playboy.
Read Entire Interview HERE [Click on blue link to read interview]
Thank you Dave!