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A UMNS Feature
By Linda Bloom*
7:00 A.M. ET Feb. 22, 2013 | NEW YORK
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (left), flanked by the Rev. Ralph
Abernathy, shakes hands with Rabbi Abraham Heschel during a Feb. 6,
1968, prayer vigil by Clergy and Laymen Concerned About Vietnam at
Arlington Cemetery.
View in Photo Gallery
A year to the day before Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, the civil rights leader made a major public speech against the war in Vietnam.
John C. Goodwin, then 25 years old, was at Riverside Church in New York to document it.
His photographs of King from that day and several other anti-war events from 1967 and 1968 have been in demand ever since.
Goodwin, who later spent many years as the staff photographer for
the United Methodist Board of Global Ministries, had a goal when he
began his professional career in photography. He wanted to show that
those opposed to the Vietnam War were not just “hippies and wild
radicals” but also respectable and concerned religious leaders.
The April 4, 1967, “Beyond Vietnam”
speech to the National Emergency Committee of Clergy and Laymen
Concerned About Vietnam drew some 3,000 people to Riverside and
captured the nation’s attention.
“That was his coming out,” Goodwin told Isaac Littlejohn Eddy, who crafted a cartoon video for Time Magazine, called “Capturing King: John Goodwin, anti-war photographer”
to re-create the day of the speech. “When he spoke at Riverside
Church, that was his ‘coming out’ in terms of being anti-war.”
Among his reasons for opposing the war, King said in his speech, was
the recognition “that the war was doing far more than devastating the
hopes of the poor at home. It was sending their sons, their brothers and
their husbands to fight and to die in extraordinarily high proportions
relative to the rest of the population.”
“We were taking the black young men who had been crippled by our
society and sending them 8,000 miles away to guarantee liberties in
Southeast Asia which they had not found in southwest Georgia and East
Harlem.”
Today, Goodwin remembers being impressed with the speech; at the
time, he “listened with one ear” as he carried out his assignment. While
the speech’s content was not a surprise to the audience, he said, “not
everybody in the Civil Rights Movement was in favor of him doing
that.” In fact, King was criticized by many, including President Lyndon B. Johnson, who did not like King making connections between civil rights and Vietnam.
The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (right) and the Rev. William Sloane
Coffin address a 1967 news conference by Clergy and Laymen Concerned
About Vietnam in Washington.
A UMNS photo © John C. Goodwin.
View in Photo Gallery
April 15 peace march
Eleven days after the speech, Goodwin photographed King marching with
Dr. Benjamin Spock, the celebrated pediatrician, at a major peace
demonstration in New York. This was just the beginning of the “Vietnam
Summer” campaign that the pair was promoting to mobilize grassroots
anti-war activists.
The April 15 march, which proceeded from Central Park to the United
Nations, was the first mass anti-war demonstration that Goodwin would
shoot. It was a paid assignment for “Youth Magazine,” a publication
started by the United Church of Christ but which eventually represented
a number of denominations.
“It was exciting, and I, of course, was happy to have maneuvered
myself to get the first row of marchers,” he said. His photograph
captures King and Spock marching arm-in-arm.
As Goodwin recounted in 2008 to Suzanne Pekow of American Radio Works for a photo essay, “King’s Last Year: Photographs by John C. Goodwin,”
he also remembered the march “because people were throwing bags of
flour out of their windows in anger,” and Goodwin was doused with hot
coffee.
In big New York marches, he explained to UMNS, some participants
would line up on side streets and then merge onto Fifth Avenue as the
march passed by. On that particular day, Goodwin had wandered down one
such side street to see who was lined up and found waiting marchers
being pelted with flour and eggs.
He was looking down into the small screen of his Hasselblad camera,
focusing on protesters on the other side of the street, when he saw on
the screen an angry woman approaching him. “Suddenly, she was throwing a
cup of hot coffee at me,” he said. “I thought, ‘What a great shot.’”
Indeed, Goodwin’s camera lens did catch the arch of hot liquid in
the air, but the coffee also found its mark. Luckily, it did not burn
him. He said that was the only time he was attacked physically during a
peace demonstration.
Photographer John C. Goodwin edits photos in the newsroom of the 2012
General Conference of the United Methodist Church at the Tampa (Fla.)
Convention Center.
A UMNS photo by Kathleen Barry.
View in Photo Gallery
Three King encounters in 1968
Early the next year, during a Jan. 12, 1968, news conference at the
Commodore Hotel in New York, Goodwin had his only conversation with the
civil rights leader.
At the end of the news conference, Goodwin mentioned that King might
know his father. The Rev. Dean Goodwin, an American Baptist pastor,
was acquainted with both King and King’s parents through encounters at
Baptist conferences and events.
"Yes, I knew your father very well,” King responded when he heard the name. “Please give him my warmest regards."
Goodwin was happy to relay the message. “I brought greetings back to my father, who was pleased,” he remembered.
That news conference had been organized to announce that Clergy and
Laymen Concerned About Vietnam was planning a second national
mobilization for peace, primarily for church-related groups, the next
month in Washington.
Goodwin was there on Feb. 6, 1968, as about 2,500 people, led by
King, gathered for a silent prayer vigil at Arlington National
Cemetery’s Tomb of the Unknowns. He captured King and the Rev. Ralph
Abernathy shaking hands with Rabbi Abraham Heschel, Rabbi Maurice
Eisendrath and Rabbi Everett Gendelrin just before the vigil began.
He also documented the evening program, when King spoke at New York
Avenue Presbyterian Church for the mobilization’s final gathering.
That was Goodwin’s last opportunity to photograph King. Two months
later, the civil rights leader was assassinated in Memphis.
*Bloom is a United Methodist News Service multimedia reporter based in New York. Follow her at http://twitter.com/umcscribe.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.