This artcile is from US Department of State, DC website..

Martin Luther King III, U.S. Representative John Lewis, and Herbie Hancock to 
Lead U.S. Department of State Commemoration of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther 
King's 1959 India Journey
The U.S. Department of State will support February 2009 celebrations in India 
to commemorate the tour by the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. 50 years ago to 
study Mahatma Gandhi. This tour deeply influenced the American civil rights 
movement. The delegation, including Martin Luther King, III; civil rights 
movement veteran U.S. Representative John Lewis; and legendary jazz musician 
Herbie Hancock, along with other distinguished Americans, will meet with 
counterparts in India to underscore the enduring importance of the King and 
Gandhi legacies.


The delegation will meet in New Delhi with government leaders, social 
activists, and youth, and will travel around India to some of the principal 
sites associated with Mahatma Gandhi’s work. There will be two special musical 
performances featuring Herbie Hancock and others organized by the Thelonious 
Monk Institute of Jazz. In Chennai, Indian musicians will conduct a special 
tribute, including performances of music on the theme of non-violence created 
by leading composer A.R. Rahman, widely acclaimed for writing the score to the 
current hit film “Slumdog Millionaire,” and a dramatic reading by film actor 
and director Kamal Haasan. 


In February 1959, Dr. King and Coretta Scott King traveled throughout India in 
search of the roots of the nonviolent social action movement for Indian 
independence, studying Mahatma Gandhi’s ideals and meeting his followers around 
the country. Upon their return to the United States, Dr. King and other leaders 
of the civil rights movement drew on Gandhi’s ideas to transform American 
society.


2009/058
 
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2009/01/115001.htm




      

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