Dr. Martin Luther King mugshot from the Birmingham Jail. |
Alabama A&M officials should use the inspiration of Dr. Martin Luther King to collect on a $527-million debt the state of Alabama owes the university, according to a post today at donaldwatkins.com. A longtime attorney who has become a leading voice in online investigative journalism, Watkins said King encouraged Black Americans to fight for what was rightfully and lawfully theirs. And Watkins should know; while he was growing up in Montgomery, AL, Dr. King was his pastor and Sunday School teacher.
Under the headline "Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Timely Message to Alabama A&M President Wims, Board of Trustees," Watkins writes:
Before he was assassinated in 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., spoke candidly about how poor White European immigrants arriving in America got 160 acres of free land per recipient to build a homestead and wealth in this country. Dr. King was talking about the Homestead Act of 1862, which was a 124-year-long federal program that awarded 270 million acres of free land to nearly 3 million white immigrants from 1862 to 1986.
The land was part of the 1.5 billion acres that was forcefully seized from Native Americans in the 1800s.
The Homestead Act of 1862 was the largest and longest wealth transfer program in U.S. history. This subject is rarely discussed in American history books or taught in public schools.
I dedicate the one-minute video below to the weak and compromised president and trustees of Alabama A&M University. In the video, Dr. King talks about the land grant college system that was established to teach the newly arriving white peasants from Europe how to farm their free land in America.(Video can be viewed at the end of this post.)
America's history of inequality in education also is part of this story, Watkins writes:
In 1872, Auburn University was designated as Alabama's land-grant university for White students. In 1891, Alabama A&M was designated as the land grant institution for Black students under the state's "separate but equal" system of higher education.
Alabama A&M's president and trustees have steadfastly failed and refused to go to the State Capitol in Montgomery to collect the university's check for $527,280,064. This $527,280,064 is the amount of money the U.S. Departments of Education and Agriculture told Gov. Kay Ivey (in a September 18, 2023, letter) is due and owing to Alabama A&M because the state underfunded the university during the past 30 years.
Dr. King was my childhood pastor, Sunday School teacher, and Baptist Training Union instructor at Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery during the early 1950s. Listen to Dr. King's words and feel his passion as he talks about going to get the check that is due and owing our people.
By the way, Dr. King spent far more time in jail cells throughout the South than I ever did. Sometimes the price we must pay for advancing and protecting our civil, economic, educational, constitutional, and voting rights is jail time. You can look at the landmark cases I litigated as a civil-rights attorney in Alabama and tell that I have never been afraid to pay this price to secure freedom and dignity for African Americans and women.
President Wims and A&M Trustees, stop being cowards. Go to Montgomery and get Alabama A&M University's check for $527,280,064! We don't need another sellout by a bunch of modern-day, weak-kneed "Negroes."
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