This story is about a different kind of march, one for better teacher pay and support. But it shares common ground with other rallies we've seen this year in its participants' peaceful demand to be valued.
As we mark the 50th聽anniversary of the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., it鈥檚 worth considering this question: Can love be a strategy for social change and justice?
Anne Firth Murray, a consulting professor at Stanford University who teaches a class on the subject, . And a fresh data point is a group of teens from Pearl, Miss., who honored Dr. King by setting out Sunday on a three-day, 50-mile trek to Memphis, Tenn. That鈥檚 where King stood in support of striking black sanitation workers 鈥撀燼nd where he was fatally shot on April 4, 1968.
If you drove past them, you might have just seen six young men sweating in the spring humidity. But if you paid closer attention, as did Monitor correspondent Carmen K. Sisson in this piece, you鈥檇 have seen the love and action they inspired. The Pearl Police Department escorted them. The Memphis Police Department welcomed them. One teen who struggled to keep walking saw his peers rally around him. A roadside vendor offered oranges out of respect for the marchers and King.
The teens, who had never met, radiated a powerful message by uniting. It jibes with a comment Professor Murray made picked up today by Daily Good. She noted that her students most enjoyed their assignment to watch for people using love as a force for social justice:聽鈥淸It] made them feel that love 鈥 could be learned, observed, and practiced.鈥
Now to our five stories, which highlight the many ways in which people yearn to be recognized and heard.