Three Perspectives
Boston public television producer Henry Morgenthau III's "The Negro and the American Promise," featuring interviews with Martin Luther King, Malcolm X, and James Baldwin, made headlines in spring 1963. The program aired in a climate of racial conflict, just months after Alabama governor George Wallace's defiant support of "segregation forever," and before the March on Washington.
The New York Times described the James Baldwin segment as "a television experience that seared the conscience." A viewer wrote of the Malcolm X segment that he was shocked "that such a blatant display of racial prejudice could be aired." Read other viewer reactions in primary sources.
Screen interviews from "The Negro and the American Promise," produced by Boston public television station WGBH in 1963.
Martin Luther King
Baptist minister, Atlanta, Georgia
"The Negro is making it palpably clear that he wants all of his rights, that he wants them here, and that he wants them now."
Video courtesy of the WGBH Media Library and Archives.
On the other side of the link are interviews with Dr. Kenneth Clarke, Malcolm X and James Baldwin.
Many Kos diarists weighed in with their thoughts on what Martin Luther King's life and work meant to them, and grannyhelen has thoughtfully assembled a guide to them. Over at Talk Left, Jeralyn points to an Alternet article that gives...