In honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, people like David and Miriam Sanders visited the national memorial on Independence Avenue despite the bitter temperature forcing residents to bundle up from head to toe.
Men, women and children surrounded the monument, located between the Lincoln and Thomas Jefferson Memorials, snapping photos of each other and the sculpture of King. Those in attendance shared their opinions of the civil rights leader.
โPeople just didnโt challenge outwardly the discrimination that we enduredโless so me but more so my parents and people before me,โ said Sanders, 63, a resident of Upper Marlboro, Md.
โYou become complacentโnot complacent, not happy about itโbut accepting of it, and hereโs somebody who challenged it and challenged it straight on, so I would say thatโs what to me was so inspiring about Dr. King.โ
For Sanders and his wife, Miriam, this was their first trip to the monument. Having grown up in North and South Carolina, he recalled how the older black community acted cautiously as to not cause any racial conflict with white people. He said Kingโs leadership in the Civil Rights Movement meant he would be walking into danger head on, an action he considers courageous.
Miriam Sanders, 61, who grew up in the District, recalled standing on the right side of the Lincoln Memorial during Kingโs โI Have a Dreamโ speech at the March on Washington in 1963. She said she was struck by the diversity of the crowd that gathered there. She described D.C. as a city divided across racial lines.
โTruth be told, I remember the march so vividly,โ she said. โThe crowd really was the big story for me.โ
SongRise, a D.C.-based a cappella group, came to the monument to help energize and inspire the crowd through music. Sarah Beller, 30, is the co-founder of the womenโs group, whose mission is to inspire people to act for social justice through song. Beller and five members of the two-year-old group asked visitors to sing along as they gathered in honor of King.
โI think heโs a symbol of an extremely important moment in our country where it was founded to be a place where everyone had equality, but it wasnโt actually the case, and it still isnโt completely the case,โ Beller said, โbut that was an extremely important moment of change where our country was able to start living up to its own stated values better.โ
Children of the Westport Homes Boys and Girls Club in Baltimore wrote essays about how King affected their lives. Laure Julliard, unit director, said the organization selected 10 children with the best essays to travel to the monument and participate in a community service activity.
While others traveled the distance to reach the memorial, Atlanta resident and artist Reginald Gillumo stood at Independence Avenue and 14th Street holding a โone of a kindโ canvas he created in Kingโs image.
He constructed the painting using a mix of acrylic and $400 worth of MAC makeup. Gillumo, a native of D.C., has also painted a canvas of President Barack Obama.
Miriam Sanders says it is important to recognize the Civil Rights Movement and the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr. as something that continues today.
โWe point to him as this charismatic leader, but there were leaders before him and there will continue to be leaders,โ she said. โWe need to think of it as a continuation, as the arc of justice not a point in time.โ

