The Oklahoman

‘We are one nation’

- BY JONATHAN LANDRUM JR.

ATLANTA — Martin Luther King Jr.’s children and the pastor of an Atlanta church where he preached decried disparagin­g remarks President Donald Trump is said to have made about African countries, while protests between Haitian immigrants and Trump supporters broke out near the president’s Florida resort Monday, the official federal holiday honoring King.

At gatherings across the nation, activists, residents and teachers honored the late civil rights leader on what would have been his 89th birthday and ahead of the 50th anniversar­y of his assassinat­ion in Memphis, Tennessee. In Oklahoma, the Cherokee Nation marked Martin Luther King Jr. Day with events aimed at coming to terms with its own history of slavery and by welcoming descendant­s of former slaves into the tribe.

Trump marked his first King holiday as president buffeted by claims that during a meeting with senators on immigratio­n last week, he used a vulgarity to describe African countries and questioned the need to allow more Haitians into the U.S. He also is said to have asked why the country couldn’t have more immigrants from nations like Norway.

In Washington, King’s eldest son, Martin Luther King III, criticized Trump, saying, “When a president insists that our nation needs more citizens from white states like Norway, I don’t even think we need to spend any time even talking about what it says and what it is.”

He added, “We got to find a way to work on this man’s heart.”

The Cherokee Nation tribe— one of the country’s largest — marked the King holiday on Monday with calls to service and by confrontin­g its slave-owning past. A federal court ruled last year that the descendant­s of former slaves, known as Freedmen, had the same rights to tribal citizenshi­p, voting, health care and housing as bloodline Cherokees.

“The time is now to deal with it and talk about it,” said Cherokee Secretary of State Chuck Hoskin Jr. “It’s been a positive thing for our country to reconcile that during Dr. King’s era, and it’s going to be a positive thing for Cherokees to talk about that history as part of reconcilin­g our history with slavery.”

One descendant of Freedmen, Rodslen BrownKing, said her mother was able to vote as a Cherokee for the first and only time recently. Other relatives died before getting the benefits that come with tribal citizenshi­p, including a 34-year-old nephew with stomach cancer, she said.

“He was waiting on this decision,” said BrownKing, of Fort Gibson, Oklahoma. “It’s just a lot of struggle, a lot of up and down trauma in our lives. It’s exciting to know we are coming together and moving forward in this.”

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? Martin Luther King III, right, with his wife, Arndrea Waters, left, and their daughter, Yolanda, 9, center, are shown during their visit to the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on Monday on the National Mall in Washington.
[AP PHOTO] Martin Luther King III, right, with his wife, Arndrea Waters, left, and their daughter, Yolanda, 9, center, are shown during their visit to the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on Monday on the National Mall in Washington.

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