Home / Full timeline / Civil rights leaders condemn Reverend Ralph David Abernathy’s memoirs of Martin Luther King, Jr.
Civil rights leaders condemn Reverend Ralph David Abernathy’s memoirs of Martin Luther King, Jr.
1989 (Oct 12)
Several of the nation's civil rights leaders sent a telegram to the Reverend Ralph David Abernathy, former president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), urging him to repudiate sections of his published memoirs that claimed that the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., spent part of the last night of his life with two different women. The accusations were made in Abernathy's autobiography, And The Walls Came Tumbling Down, which had been released earlier in the month. The civil rights leaders told Abernathy in a "message of pain and love" that "as friends and beneficiaries of the King dream, we are shocked and appalled by some of the statements in your new book." One of the signers of the telegram, John Hurst Adams, president of the National Congress of Black Churches, charged that the book was "riddled with gross inaccuracies and painful distortions." Another signer, NAACP executive secretary Benjamin Hooks, called the book "criminally irresponsible." Hooks took particular issue with Abernathy's account of an alleged encounter between King and a woman on the eve of the assassination. While Abernathy placed King in the woman's home at 1 a.m., Hooks recalled that he was with the civil rights leader at the Mason Temple in Memphis, where he had delivered his final sermon, at that hour. Others who endorsed the message to Abernathy included U.S. representatives Ronald V. Dellums, William H. Gray III, John Lewis, Floyd H. Flake, Alan D. Wheat, Walter D. Fauntroy, former representative Parren Mitchell, Southern Christian Leadership Conference president Joseph L. Lowery, Operation PUSH leader Reverend Jesse L. Jackson, and Atlanta mayor Andrew J. Young. In his response, Abernathy asserted: "In including some of the things in the book, I have had to agonize, balancing my need to tell a complete and honest story with what I know to be my responsibility to respect the privacy and dignity of the living and the dead....I can only say that I have written nothing in malice and omitted nothing out of cowardice."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.