MLK Day at King's Atlanta congregation features daughter's warning about
anti-woke rhetoric
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[January 21, 2025]
By JEFF MARTIN and JEFFREY COLLINS
ATLANTA (AP) — A massive 70-member choir belted out “Hallelujah” at a
Martin Luther King Jr. Day service Monday at his former congregation in
Atlanta, followed by a stern message from his youngest daughter warning
against anti-woke rhetoric.
The service at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta was among the most
prominent commemorations of King that played out across the country
Monday. At the front of the church's stage, seven people held large
signs proclaiming “JUSTICE”, “FREEDOM” and “DEMOCRACY.”
“We are living in a time when anti-woke rhetoric has become a weapon to
divide us and distract us from the real issues of injustice," King’s
daughter, the Rev. Bernice King, said. “To be woke is to be aware of
oppression and commitment to justice.”
The MLK holiday was half of the nation’s double-duty Monday: the
inauguration of Donald Trump, who heads back to the White House, created
mixed feelings on King’s day for civil rights leaders who have opposed
Trump’s rhetoric and stances on race and civil rights.
The keynote speaker at Ebenezer then made a reference to Trump, saying
he had heard “that somebody had won a mandate.”

“I don’t care who you are, if you win 60% of the vote, you never win a
mandate to violate justice,” said Bishop William Barber II, co-chair of
the Poor People’s Campaign. “You never win a mandate to hurt people.”
But in Washington, in a speech after taking the oath of office, Trump
noted the significance of the King holiday.
“In his honor, we will strive together to make his dream a reality,”
Trump said.
Ebenezer is where King was baptized as a child and ordained at 19 years
old. He became the congregation’s co-pastor in 1960 alongside his
father, Rev. Martin Luther King Sr. He remained in that role until his
death, and his funeral was held at the church. The church is now part of
the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historical Park & Preservation
District.
Monday marks the third time in the nearly 40 years since the federal
King holiday became law that it coincides with a presidential
inauguration. Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama also were sworn
in for their second terms on the holiday. MLK Day lands on the third
Monday of January — close to King’s Jan. 15 birthday.
King himself worried the legal protections he dedicated his life to
realizing would not be followed by greater anti-discrimination efforts
or social programs. The celebrated Black civil rights leader proposed it
would take white Americans embracing a deeper kinship with Black
Americans and engaging in economic and social solidarity to see change.
There was a heavy security presence outside the Atlanta church, where
more than two dozen police officers from across metro Atlanta stood
guard with all-terrain vehicles, police motorcycles and suburban utility
vehicles. Streets in the immediate vicinity of the historic church were
blocked to vehicle traffic.
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Democratic National Committee Chair Jamie Harrison speaks at a rally
at the South Carolina Statehouse to honor Martin Luther King Jr. on
his holiday on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025, in Columbia, S.C. (AP
Photo/Jeffrey Collins)

Lonnie J. Edwards of Stone Mountain, Georgia, has been attending the
annual service for 15 to 20 years. He always finds it refreshing
that the movement King led is still alive, and he said he enjoys
“sharing the kind of philosophy and the image that Dr. King had not
just for Atlanta but for America.”
Liccy Arias, 21, a recent Geogia State Univeristy alumnus, was among
a large group of Georgia State students and faculty members at the
Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change. Her
visit was part of the day of service the Atlanta-based school has on
the holiday.
“Helping out makes my heart very, very full,” she said.
In frigid Columbia, South Carolina, an MLK Day rally at the
Statehouse entered its 25th year, featuring a smaller crowd, and
some trepidation mixed in about the change of power occurring in
Washington. The South Carolina event started in 2000 when tens of
thousands poured in to demand the Confederate flag be taken down
from the Capitol dome.
In 2013, the rally paused so thousands on hand could watch Obama,
the nation’s first Black president, take the oath of office for a
second time on big screens. On Monday, there was no mention of the
2025 inauguration.
College student Michael Parker thought about how King endured
through all kinds of racism and hate, confident he would make the
world a better place. That was the attitude he was taking Monday.
“There’s still work to be done," Parker said. "Progress hasn’t gone
steady through the generations. We need to keep working on Dr.
King’s dream."
King was shot in Memphis, Tennessee, while standing on the balcony
of the old Lorraine Motel on April 4, 1968. The civil rights leader
had been in the city to support a sanitation workers’ strike. The
motel has been turned into the National Civil Rights Museum, which
was providing free admission and offering extended hours to visitors
Monday.

The museum also scheduled musical performances, food and blood
donation drives, and a livestreamed presentation that will explore
King’s leadership and his relevance to present day social justice
movements.
___
Collins reported from Columbia, South Carolina. Adrian Sainz
contributed from Memphis, Tennessee; Jonathan Mattise, from
Nashville, Tennessee; and Bruce Shipkowski, from Toms River, New
Jersey.
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