Home / Full timeline / Martin Luther King, Sr., and Richard Attenborough, the British film maker who produced and directed the epic motion picture Gandhi, are named co-recipients of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Non-Violent Peace Prize.
Martin Luther King, Sr., and Richard Attenborough, the British film maker who produced and directed the epic motion picture Gandhi, are named co-recipients of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Non-Violent Peace Prize.
1983 (Jan 15)
Martin Luther King, Sr., and Richard Attenborough, the British film maker who produced and directed the epic motion picture Gandhi, were named co-recipients of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Non-Violent Peace Prize. The awards were presented by Coretta Scott King, president of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Center for Non-Violent Social Change and widow of the slain civil rights leader, at ceremonies marking the 15th annual observance of King Jr.'s birthday in Atlanta, Georgia. Each man was given a medal inscribed with a quote from a King, Jr., speech: “Now the judgment of God is upon us, and we must all live together as brothers or we will all perish together as fools.” They were also presented checks for $1,000. Upon receipt of his award, Attenborough recalled that in the Gandhi Museum in New Delhi there was one picture in the great hall,” the picture of Martin Luther King, Jr. “That is fitting,” he said, because “no one—and there are many who claim to-followed his teachings more closely than Dr. King.... I feel more touched now than I can ever remember on any occasion in my life.” King, Sr., thanked his family for helping him through the deaths of his two sons and his wife and thanked "God for what he left me."
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.