King Who Condemned US Wars Again Betrayed by War-Supporting Clergy’s Praise
by Jay Janson / January 21st, 2012

We have just witnessed the annual birthday-highlighted betrayal 
of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., with clergy leading the way — a 
betrayal of what King taught and was dedicated to when he was 
assassinated; namely, exposing the US overseas crimes against humanity 
for predatory investments that were draining away men, money and 
resources, and causing poverty and injustice at home.
With aircraft carriers off the coast of Iran, ever new act-of-war 
sanctions being put in place, and calls to bomb Iran crescendoing in 
Washington, some of us had foolishly thought that this year’s King 
birthday observances might see a few prominent clerics calling attention to 
King’s condemnation of US wars, long taboo in mainstream 
military-oriented America.
Organized religion in America has, for forty-five years, cooperated 
with the  understanding that no one shall mention that the great civil 
rights leader and national hero had denounced his government as “the 
greatest purveyor of violence in the world.”
The buildup to war on Iran, the daily toll of human lives from 
military action in many Muslim nations, the invasions of Afghanistan , 
Iraq, Panama, Dominican Republic, etc., the CIA criminal and 
anti-democratic civil war creating activities, the continuation of the 
Vietnam war for eight years after King’s murder, all needed the silent 
cooperation of clergy that King condemned as betrayal.
King’s betrayers also betray those millions of innocents, who, in 
their own beloved countries, fall in harms way of heavily armed 
Americans and remain undefended by a US clergy busy praising and 
expressing love and gratitude for what King did for them, while it 
blackballs the King who worked to do the same for his equally loved 
brothers and sisters in countries under US attack.
Do all these many thousands of clergy imagine that no one significant will ever 
notice these betrayals? Do any of the elderly ministers, who 
knew King personally, not feel some bites of conscience?
It’s hard to believe that Rev. Jesse Jackson, and Andrew Young, who 
had held the dying King in their arms and went on to high political 
office within the establishment, did not have to grit their teeth to be 
able to hold themselves back from speaking of King’s condemnation of US 
wars at the unveiling of the King Monument last year.
Sincere antiwar scholars have long accepted that clergy adheres to a 
strictly conformist role in a society ruled covertly and overtly by the 
investment community consensus on Wall Street and the 
military-industrial complex through their control of all three branches 
of the government, of all important sources of information with power to 
disinform, of the Pentagon and of the vast secret functions of the CIA.
The sudden tempestuous 1967 King caused problems for religious 
leaders, implicating them in complicity for having never challenged 
pathetic lies justifying mass murder that King was exposing. Ensconced 
in the national body politic, they have stonewalled on. Even today, to 
our knowledge, not a single congregation in the nation endorses King’s 
condemnation of US wars.
Antiwar activists are always searching for clergy who have followed 
in the footsteps of King during his last year that provoked a national 
controversy long since carefully blacked out of public awareness. This 
writer feels fortunate to know Father Paul Mayer, who worked with King, 
endorses the King Condemned US Wars International Awareness Campaign, and was 
recently in Occupy Wall Street’s Freedom Park making sure 
people knew of King’s condemnation of US wars and predatory investments.
I am also lucky to have had the chance to chat briefly with Rev. 
Jeremiah Wright before hearing him speak at the Monthly Review 50th 
Anniversary, where he eloquently expounded on reasons solidly based 
on history and King’s teaching, why every sensitive person aware of the 
violent death of millions should want to consider what Wright was 
repeatedly shown crying out in video, “God damn America for its crimes 
against humanity.”
But the most educating King learning experience was spending an 
hour-and-a- half with Riverside Church Head Minister William Sloan 
Coffin in 1982, while working under his guidance in the church tower’s 
International Liaison Office in support of the UN 2nd Special Session on 
Disarmament.
Rev. Coffin’s life had been intertwined with King’s, and his trip to 
Hanoi as invited negotiator for the release of US POWs had antedated 
King’s own involvement. Rev. Coffin had been jailed many times and 
finally convicted of conspiracy to counsel, aid, and abet resistance to 
the draft.
Coffin was a musician and former CIA officer in its Russian 
Department. I had performed on the first cultural exchange with the 
Soviet Union and shared his passion for the language. He was interested 
that I had been in Moscow during the Cuban missile crisis and on two 
other State Department run tours in Latin America during CIA and 
Pentagon actions in a half dozen countries in turmoil. I remember being 
struck by his insight as he reviewed the history of organized religion 
as so often being on the side of repression and automatic opposition to 
revolution, noting that the revolutions of France, Mexico, Russia, 
Spain, and China had been anti-clerical for the people’s memory of the 
church having been hand maiden to conquering empires who produced the 
suffering that was the fertile ground for revolution in the first place.
So impressive to hear this from a minster famous for physically 
interfering with government crime in the name of Jesus, who never 
doubted the role of the  Christian church in caring for society, but 
was keenly aware that modern empires had used and perverted the church 
into materialism and as accessory to domination by powerful criminal 
elements.
I never saw him again, as I as spent most of the next  twenty years 
in China, Korea, Japan, Vietnam and Thailand (and returned a Buddhist).
During six years in Korea, I applied King’s teaching and discovered 
things were not as I had been led to believe by President Truman and 
from conversation in church courtyards.  Koreans, including Korean 
Christians, all know that American business interests had had President 
Theodore Roosevelt snub Koreans and recognize the Japanese occupation of Korea; 
that President Wilson had formally recognized Korea as Japanese 
territory (in all, making possible a brutal 40 year occupation); that 
Americans had not fought the Japanese in Korea, coming in rather when 
Koreans had already accomplished their own politically democratic free 
Korea; that after unconscionably cutting the nation in two, had brought 
Singman Rhee in from Washington, who would set up a hated government, 
whose police and special forces would massacre (now fully UN documented) a 
couple of hundred thousand unionists, socialists, communists often 
along with their families in the South in the years before the army of 
the Northern government invaded and with little opposition overran all 
of the South, uniting Korea in the five weeks before the US invaded, 
bringing death to three million and flattening every city but one in the North 
and South; that a severely militaristic North Korea is the result of it having 
been bombed so mercilessly, threatened with the atom bomb, and strangled with 
tight international sanctions and economic blockades for nearly 60 years, while 
under continual barrage of anti-communist 
propaganda in Western media; that Rhee fled for his life after the war, 
and a series of military dictatorships prevailed under a heavy US Army 
presence until the mid 1980s; that in spite of all this deadly result, 
many Korean Christians and their clergy feel the need to accept the 
international media version of American righteous protection of Koreans 
from communism.
Working as Assistant Conductor of the Vietnam Symphony Orchestra 
(founded by Ho Chi Minh) in Hanoi, during most of the 1990s, I  learned 
something of the human side of what the Vietnamese call the American war after 
the French war of recolonization paid for by US taxpayers.
All the musicians had lost family. “Killed by the Americans” they 
would smile in Buddhist equanimity when asked. Between preparing 
Beethoven and Brahms I got to know the most soft spoken, heroic, 
charming and fun to be with people in the world. If many of Americans 
recognize their complicity, why should not clergy, who turned their back on 
King’s revelations.
I cringe when I think of the Grimm fairy tale nature of the 
anti-Vietnamese propaganda heard over so many years. Do clerical 
stomachs not turn like ours do as candidates for public office are 
acclaimed as heroes for having “served” in Vietnam?
On the opening day of the US bombing of Baghdad in 2003, I marched in a London 
street protest. The next day as our flight on the way to India detoured well 
away from Iraq, we could see flashes on the horizon — 
Iraqis being killed and maimed supposedly to depose a Saddam Hussein who had 
been supported by the CIA for two decades. Had to ask myself is 
bull being sold as to why the US is bombing or invading this or that 
small country because clergy leaders deny the necessity to study history 
carefully, as King came to do to help his people.
This idea of clergy not properly protecting us from deception even of the 
crudest historically ass-backwards kind was still fresh in my mind 
as I read the three Calcutta English language newspapers, and watched 
BBC Asia, which interestingly is quite a bit to the left of BBC London 
or New York, because it has to compete with local channels serving a 
citizenry less gullible after suffering a century of racist colonialism. (The 
British, including clergy, back in England feed on the same 
outlandish nonsense excusing and justifying the colonial behavior of 
their armies abroad just as America’s clergy accepts absurd excuses for 
American neocolonial wars abroad).
At a dinner party thrown for the patrons of the concert series, I was 
introduced to an Anglican minister stationed in India. Revved up as I 
was from watching floods of videos and photos of piles of bodies of 
civilians, headless children, body parts and clothing strewn everywhere, 
(images not being seen in America), I thought to comment inquisitively, how the 
war, with British pilots bombing, must be weighing heavily on 
him, as one responsible for moral leadership. He looked at me puzzled, a little 
annoyed, and answered to the effect that a minister’s job had 
absolutely nothing to do with war or preventing it, that church and 
politics don’t mix. Altercation proceeded:
“Church and its government’s homicide surely don’t mix either – you bless the 
troops shipping out to kill.”
“Its the job of a priest, rabbi or minister.”
“It’s a political act of acquiescence or complicity in homicide .”
I thought to myself, yes, of course, Western establishment-entrenched religious 
leaders must be the same throughout the world. Wasn’t I in 
India, where pastors took tea with wealthy faithful, both well 
acclimatized to a multitude of the landless being starved so that a 
profit might be turned from what would have been their land to cultivate 
(predatory investments King spoke of). Charity, rather putting an end 
to the legalized starving of the poor, is the usual clergy-led Christian 
response.
When I was a kid, I tired of listening to sermons about the hem 
length of ladies skirts and such, when the headlines of the newspapers I 
delivered were about millions of people starving to death. It caused me to 
visit my schoolmates houses of worship looking in vain for better 
Christianity.
As an adult, I have, on many occasions,  confessed feeling as an 
American drenched in the blood of millions only to hear my minister or 
priest trying to help me be at peace with it.
Official clergy enjoy prestige as the guardians of morality, family 
and community values but unlike King are careful not to answer why 
Americans and Christians from other nominally white nations, are killing 
Afghanis in Afghanistan, for ten years designating Taliban as the enemy as were 
the Vietcong in King’s day.
The average cleric would most likely talk no differently than the 
average American, either in some agreement with an outrageous lie 
justifying war on Afghanis, or fielding a disarming remark to deflect 
such an uncomfortably serious and aggressive question, “Look, nobody 
likes war’ or the more fundamental oxymoron, “War is war’ and “God will 
receive the victims.’
By praising exceptional clergy King cut at the majority, “surely this is the 
first time in our nation’s history that a significant number of 
its religious leaders have chosen to move beyond the prophesying of 
smooth patriotism to the high grounds of a firm dissent based upon the 
mandates of conscience and the reading of history.”
Even on King’s birthday  the whole Baptist community leadership and 
the NAACP focused solely on domestic injustice, while the wars that King 
condemned as perpetuating domestic injustice rage on, unspoken of. Is 
this not an obvious repudiation of King’s guidance?
Do all these pastors and church officials think King was wrong when 
he taught, in the maturity of the increased awareness of his final year, the 
futility of trying to improve America while America is destroying 
other nations, using up social and material resources to conquer abroad 
for accumulation of capital by investors?
A prominent New York church, where King once denounced his government for 
crimes against humanity, held a special King birthday event in 
which the personable minister opening the service, though having on 
other occasions decried today’s wars, spoke of “that awful war” (in 
Vietnam) as if that is what King had spoken against and not described it as 
being a part of the bloody wars and calculated violence presently 
still going on for financial interests. Misleadingly listed in the 
program was hearing a recording of “Beyond Vietnam” (in which King had 
detailed US crimes.) We heard only a carefully selected few minutes long 
snippet calling for improving society along general principles of 
social well being that would not have offended supporters of today’s 
wars or even war criminals or war profiteers.
King had told us, “The war in Vietnam is but a symptom of a far 
deeper malady.”  We have seen  a pattern of suppression,  the presence 
of U.S. military advisers in Venezuela. This need to maintain social 
stability for our investments accounts for the counterrevolutionary 
action of American forces in Guatemala. It tells why American 
helicopters are being used against guerrillas in Cambodia and why 
American napalm and Green Beret forces have already been active against 
rebels in Peru. They will be concerned about Mozambique and South 
Africa. “Look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West 
investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa, and South America, only 
to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the 
country. This is not just.”
If antiwar activists would relentlessly quote from King’s Beyond Vietnam sermon 
nonstop, it would make it difficult for majority clergy to go on 
ignoring King’s condemnation of US wars. According to Howard Zinn clergy 
opposition would make it difficult for US wars to be continued and 
would make network entertainment/news hailing Vietnam and Iraq military 
ventures as glorious prosecutable as hate crimes.
Jay Janson, spent eight years as Assistant 
Conductor of the Vietnam Symphony Orchestra in Hanoi and also toured, 
including with Dan Tai-son, who practiced in a Hanoi bomb shelter. The 
orchestra was founded by Ho Chi Minh,and it plays most of its concerts 
in the Opera House, a diminutive copy of the Paris Opera. In 1945, our 
ally Ho, from a balcony overlooking the large square and flanked by an 
American Major and a British Colonel, declared Vietnam independent. 
Everyone in the orchestra lost family, "killed by the Americans" they 
would mention simply, with Buddhist un-accusing acceptance. Jay can be 
reached at: tdmedia2...@yahoo.com. Read other articles by Jay.

http://dissidentvoice.org/2012/01/king-who-condemned-us-wars-again-betrayed-by-war-supporting-clergys-praise/#more-41438


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