By LUCAS L. JOHNSON
II,
NASHVILLE, Tenn.
(AP) — As the nation reflects on the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., an
audiotape of an interview with the civil rights leader discovered in a
Tennessee attic sheds new light on a famous phone call John F. Kennedy made to
King's wife more than 50 years ago.
Historians
generally agree that Kennedy's phone call to Coretta Scott King expressing
concern over her husband's arrest in October 1960 — and Robert Kennedy's work
behind the scenes to get King released — helped JFK win the White House that
fall.
King himself,
while appreciative, wasn't as quick to credit the Kennedys alone with getting
him out of jail, according to a previously unreleased portion of the interview
with the civil rights leader days after Kennedy's election.
"The Kennedy
family did have some part ... in the release," King says in the recording,
which was discovered in 2012. "But I must make it clear that many other
forces worked to bring it about also."
A copy of the
original recording will be played for visitors at the National Civil Rights
Museum in Memphis for a "King Day" event on Jan. 20.
King was arrested
a few weeks before the presidential election at an Atlanta sit-in. Charges were
dropped, but King was held for allegedly violating probation for an earlier traffic
offense and transferred to the Georgia State Prison in Reidsville, Ga.
The Kennedys
intervened, and King was released. Their intervention won the support of black
voters who helped give Kennedy the winning edge in several key states.
Despite their help,
however, King was careful not to give them too much credit.
"I think Dr.
King was aware in the tape that he probably did more for John F. Kennedy than
perhaps John F. Kennedy did for him," said Keya Morgan, a New York-based
collector and expert on historical artifacts. Morgan acquired the reel-to-reel
audiotape from Chattanooga, Tenn., resident Stephon Tull, who discovered it
while cleaning out his father's attic.
Raymond Winbush,
director of the Institute for Urban Research at Maryland's Morgan State University,
said Kennedy's call to King's wife was political in nature because the Kennedys
had been slow to get involved in the civil rights movement.
He said John
Kennedy didn't actually commit to the movement until a few months before his
assassination when civil rights leader Medgar Evers was gunned down by a
Klansman outside his Jackson, Miss., home just after midnight on June 12, 1963.
The slaying came
hours after JFK's television speech in support of civil rights and helped
propel the struggle for equality to national attention.
"There were a
lot of black folks who ... weren't fully committed to his campaign," said
Winbush, who is also a historian and psychologist. "That call he made to
Coretta moved black folks."
He said King's
comments on the tape were measured because he probably didn't want to offend
black supporters, like the NAACP, that had also aided him.
"He kind of
went in the middle," Winbush said.
Tull, the
Chattanooga man who discovered the tape, said his father had planned to write a
book about the racism he encountered growing up in Chattanooga and later as an
adult. Tull said his dad, an insurance salesman, interviewed King when he
visited the city, but never completed the book and just stored the recording
with some other interviews he had done. Tull's father is now in his late 80s
and under hospice care. Tull has asked that his father not be identified.
In the recording,
King also discusses his definition of nonviolence, his visit to Africa and the
impact of the civil rights movement.
"I am
convinced that when the history books are written in future years, historians
will have to record this movement as one of the greatest epochs of our
heritage," he said.
After Morgan
acquired the tape, he sold it to magician David Copperfield, who then donated
it to the National Civil Rights Museum to promote King's message of
nonviolence.
Copperfield said
King inspired people to dream.
"That's too
important for one person to possess," Copperfield said of the recording.
"You have to share that with people to remind as many people as possible
of the message."
Barbara Andrews,
the museum's director of education, said she's pleased the museum's visitors
will get a chance to hear the recording, which will be among the exhibits at
the newly-renovated facility scheduled to fully open in April.
"It's so
powerful for us to be able to hear Dr. King in his own words again so many
years after his death," Andrews said. "And I think for our visitors
to be able to hear him say these words again will resonate in ... a way that we
could not convey third person."