Stride Toward Freedom by Martin Luther King Jr.
Background –In the 1950s, the civil rights movement focused its efforts on overturning the
so-called Jim Crow laws, the segregation laws that kept African A mericans from equal
participation in public life. In 1954, the Supreme Court issued its decision in the landmark
case Brown v. Board of Education. In this decision, t he court declared that “separate but
equal” education, a central provision of segregationist policy, was inherently
discriminatory. Buoyed by this win, civil rights activists began to challenge Jim Crow
through other forms of peaceful protest, such as the year-long mass boycott of seg regated
buses in Montgomery, Alabama, beginning in 1955. In, Stride Toward Freedom, published
in 1958, a confident and optimistic King describes the philosophy behind the successful
boycott.
Oppressed people deal with their oppression in three characteristic ways. One way is
acquiescence: The oppressed resign themselves to their doom. They tacitly adjust them selves to
oppression, and thereby become conditioned to it. In every movem ent toward freedom some of
the oppressed prefer to remain oppressed. Almost 2,800 years ago Moses set out to lead the
children of Israel from the slavery of Egypt to the freedom of the prom ised land.
1
He soon
discovered that slaves do not always welcome their deliverers. They become accusto med to
being slaves. They would rather gear those ills they have, as Shakespeare pointed out, than flee
to others that they know not of.
2
They prefer the “fleshpots of Egypt”
3
to the ordeals of
emancipation.
There is such a thing as the freedom of exhaustion. Som e people are so worn down by
the yoke of oppression that they give up. A few years ago in the slum areas of Atlanta, a Negro
guitarist used to sign almost daily: “Been down so long that down don’t bother me.” This is the
type of negative freedom and resignation that often engulfs the life of the oppressed.
But this is not the way out. To accept passively an unjust sy stem is to cooperate with that
system; thereby the oppressed become as evil as the oppressor. Non-cooperation with evil is as
much a moral obligation as is cooperation with good. The oppressed must never allow the
conscience of the oppressor to slumber. Religion reminds every man that he is his brother’s
keeper.
4
To accept injustice or segregation passiv ely is to say to the oppressor that his actions
are morally right. It is a way of allowing his conscience to fall asleep. At this moment the
1. promised land: the land of Canaan, promised by God in the Bible (Genesis 12:1-3, 7) to
Abraham’s descendants.
2. bear those ills…know not of: an allus ion to a line in Act3, Scene 1, of Ham let by William
Shakespeare.
3. prefer the “fleshpots of Egypt”: an allusion to a line in the book of Exodus in the Bible. As
Moses was leading the Israelites out of Egypt, some of them grumbled and wished they had
stayed there.
4. his brother’s keeper : In the book of Genesis, after Cain killed his brother Abel, he denied
knowing Abel’s whereabouts by asking, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” In general, the saying
refers to a reluctance to accept responsibility for others.