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Prince George's Suite Magazine is an award-winning lifestyle publication that publishes six times per year. It's mission is to tell the story of Prince George's County and it's residents, to shed light on the best and brightest in the country and to offer positive lifestyle options to those who live, work and play in the region.   

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King And What His Legacy Must Mean Today

King And What His Legacy Must Mean Today

County Executive Angela Alsobrooks And Council Member At-Large Mel Franklin Share Remarks

Be Inspired By Dr. King – Especially Now

By Angela Alsobrooks

Martin Luther King, Jr. was a man of great conscience. His message of freedom, equality, justice and love is just as urgent today as it was during the 11-year period (1957-68) that he traveled over six million miles and spoke over twenty-five hundred times.

Prince George’s County Executive Angela Alsobrooks

Today, the voting rights that Dr. King championed are under attack nationwide as states pass voter suppression laws. These laws lead to significant burdens for eligible voters trying to exercise their most fundamental constitutional right. Since 2008, states across the country have passed measures to make it harder for Americans—particularly black people, the elderly, students, and people with disabilities—to exercise their fundamental right to cast a ballot. 

On this Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Dr. King's fight for justice should inspire us as we face the challenges of 2022. I leave you with the words Dr. King shared in his "Give Us the Ballot," address delivered at the Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom on May 17, 1957:

Keep going today. Keep moving amid every obstacle. Keep moving amid every mountain of opposition. . . When that happens, “the morning stars will sing together and the sons of God will shout for joy.’’

-Angela Alsobrooks is The County Executive of Prince George’s County

 

 

The Humanity of Dr. King

By Mel Franklin

At-Large Prince George’s County Councilmember Mel Franklin

Every year, we have a tremendous day of service in honor of the life and legacy of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. But every MLK holiday, I can’t help but feel a bit of sadness. Sadness that Dr. King’s life was cut so short. Cut short before he could see his kids grow up. Cut short before he could live a long life with his amazing wife, Coretta. Cut short before he could finish the Dream that he started. I was not yet born when Dr. King marched for jobs and freedom. But amidst all of the lionizing and rose-colored tributes, I am reminded that Dr. King was a human being. A human being with a family, friends, and personal hopes and dreams of his own…family and friends who were left with a permanent hole in their hearts.

While being one of history’s most beloved figures today, Dr. King was not always loved in his day. He was hated by many for his unwillingness to settle, even in the black community. For his unwillingness to settle for half of equal rights, half of full human dignity, half of a more perfect union, half of a nonviolent movement. He knew that America, despite its lofty ideals of freedom and the American Dream, was failing the descendants of slavery. He also believed through nonviolent struggle, strategic agitation, and broad coalition building that America could change…and change America did. Most of us today can’t imagine drinking at a water fountain that says ‘colored’ or giving up our seat on a public bus because of the color of our skin. But many of our elders living today experienced that reality for many, many years. Some of them also struggled at Dr. King’s side and in the civil rights movement here in Prince George’s County. We still have so much to learn from their stories. It is because of their struggle and the movement for which Dr. King and so many others gave their lives, that people like me never had to use a segregated bathroom or be denied a home in a “whites only” community.

 

But Dr. King, a man, a husband, and a father, did not get the opportunity to see so many of the fruits of his labors. He led a bus boycott at age 26, a march on Washington at age 34, and was assassinated at age 39. Yet remembering Dr. King, the man, taken with so much of his life left to live, reminds us just how great his sacrifice really was. Thank you, Dr. King.

-Mel Franklin is a Prince George’s County Council Member (At-Large)

 

 

A New First For Maryland As Moore Makes A Call To Action

A New First For Maryland As Moore Makes A Call To Action

Being King For A Day

Being King For A Day