Home / Full timeline / Ralph Abernathy’s autobiography claiming that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., may have engaged in extramarital affairs on the night before his assassination, is disputed by civil rights activists Abjua Abi Naantaanbuu and Bernard Lee.
Ralph Abernathy’s autobiography claiming that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., may have engaged in extramarital affairs on the night before his assassination, is disputed by civil rights activists Abjua Abi Naantaanbuu and Bernard Lee.
1989 (Oct 24)
In a news conference in Washington, D.C., Abjua Abi Naantaanbuu, a civil rights activist from Memphis, Tennessee, and Bernard Lee, a veteran civil rights activist, disputed allegations made by Ralph David Abernathy in his autobiography, And the Walls Came Tumbling Down, that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., may have engaged in extramarital affairs on the night before his assassination in 1968. Naantaanbuu and Lee, who were present when the alleged infidelity occurred, accused Abernathy of being drunk and asleep at the time. The news conference was sponsored by the Coalition of Friends and Beneficiaries of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Dream, which had taken strong exception to Abernathy's published views ever since they appeared earlier in the year. Members of the Coalition of Friends included civil rights leaders Dick Gregory, Benjamin Hooks, John Lewis, Jesse Jackson, Joseph Lowery, and Andrew Young.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.