Alert
Close

New! Boost your memory with AARP Brain Fitness. Try these fun exercises proven more effective than crosswords

AARP Membership: Just $16 a Year

Highlights

Open

Dunkin' Donuts

Members receive a Donut with purchase of a L or XL beverage

Social Security Calculator

What will your Social Security benefits pay out?

AARP® Vision Discounts

provided by EyeMed

Technical Icon

Spanish Preferred?

Visit aarp.org/espanol

Job Tips for Workers 50+

Hear insights from hiring employers

Contests and
Sweeps

You Could Win $50,000!

Plus you’ll get free tips and tools to help you find your perfect path to retirement
See official rules.

Today's
news

Most Popular
Articles

Viewed

Recommended

Commented

King's Message: The Power of You

How "I Have a Dream" shapes our lives

What can we be in life? Few figures in history have answered this question with as much clarity and moral authority as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

His words and deeds cultivated belief in the idea that every single person has power. For African Americans and anyone else who had believed the exact opposite for so long, this was exhilarating. Imagine suddenly thinking you could be or do anything. Opening that pathway to possibility was Dr. King's enduring gift.

See also: Remembering Martin Luther King Jr.

The first time I saw Dr. King on television, he was talking about excelling, about being the best. You might be a garbage man, he implied, but be the best garbage man, be a world class garbage man. That's how a kid like me began to understand that I could be or do anything in life. That's how a kid like me decided, "I'm going to be Miles Davis." Eventually, of course, I learned, I refined and I figured out that I had to be me. I couldn't be Miles.

King's universal relevance is partly what makes the dedication of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial in Washington, D.C., such a singular occasion. It is the first memorial on the National Mall to honor a man of color and the only one that does not commemorate a president or a war. It is a memorial celebrating the timeless themes of justice, democracy and hope — a memorial that will forever challenge us to be our best selves.

Dr. King's life was about living in the moral moment and moving people to action. For him, rights were more than assumed; that meant that people had to defend and fight for their rights from time to time. For him, this is what animated the American story. He knew that America was hatched by radicals who declared equality among all people. And he believed that loving and serving humanity, his purpose on Earth, was the kind of radical notion America needed.  

These ideas found their fullest expression in Dr. King's iconic I Have a Dream speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in August 1963. Passages in this speech still shape the lives and destinies of people everywhere. This is because the dream exhorts us to be our best.

Topic Alerts

You can get weekly email alerts on the topics below. Just click “Follow.”

Manage Alerts

Processing

Please wait...

progress bar, please wait

Tell Us WhatYou Think

Please leave your comment below.

You must be signed in to comment.

Sign In | Register

More comments »

washington watch

AARP Advocacy

Discounts & Benefits

From companies that meet the high standards of service and quality set by AARP.

financial products

Member access to financial and insurance products and services at AARPfinancial.com.

Grandson (8-9) whispering to grandfather, close-up

Members save on hearing care with the AARP® Hearing Care Program provided by HearUSA.

AARP Discounts on Consumer Cellular Phones and Plans

Members save 5% on monthly service and usage charges with Consumer Cellular.

Member Benefits

Members receive exclusive member benefits & affect social change. Join Today

Featured
Groups

Politics — Current Events

Speak out on the issues and controversies of the day. Discuss

Issues & Elections

Civil, bipartisan discussions of today's issues and topics of national interest. Discuss