With Chinese tourists making some 83 million international trips in
2012 — up from 10 million in 2000, according to the United Nations World
Tourism Organization — and now often displacing Japanese as the biggest
spenders from Asia, wouldn’t it be nice if they and others took home
from their next trip to Washington something more than a suitcase full
of souvenirs and designer goods?
For both American and Asian travelers to the U.S. capital this month,
the name Martin Luther King Jr. is likely to be of particular interest
as will the statue and surrounding plaza built to honor him in this city
of monuments.
King is of course the iconic African-American civil rights leader who
fell to an assassin’s bullet on April 4, 1968. The late Nobel Peace
Prize laureate is back in the news this August as the United States
commemorates the 50th anniversary of his historic “I Have a Dream”
speech.
That speech — delivered to more than 250,000 people on Aug. 28 from
the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the landmark 1963 “March on
Washington for Jobs and Freedom” — was a defining moment of the American
civil rights movement and for King. His is a name that Asian students
of world history, whether in Tokyo or Beijing, should also know.
But how about the name Lei Yixin?
Lei is the sculptor from Hunan province in China who was chosen,
though not without controversy, to create the 10-meter- tall stone
statue of the late civil rights leader that stands at the center of a
$120 million Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington, opening two
years ago.
He too is back in the news as repairs, under Lei’s watchful eyes,
have been made to remove one of two inscriptions from King that had been
carved into the stone memorial. The now-removed inscription had
appeared on the north face of the three-story statue and had been paired
with a quote on the south face that reads, “Out of the mountain of
despair, a stone of hope.”
The offending inscription, “I was a drum major for justice, peace and
righteousness,” was removed in early August, with work following to
smooth out the stone where the quote once appeared. The inscription was a
paraphrase of a quote from a sermon that King had delivered two months
before he was assassinated in 1968, and its awkward shortening of what
King had actually said was criticized for distorting the tone and
meaning and making the civil right’s leader sound arrogant.
“Yes, if you want to say that I was a drum major, say that I was a
drum major for justice,” said King, at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist
Church. The complete quote continues, “Say that I was a drum major for
peace. I was a drum major for righteousness. And all of the other
shallow things will not matter.”
Imagine if a visit to the work of this once- obscure Chinese sculptor
at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial were added to the itineraries of
the throngs of Asian tourists — particularly from mainland China — now
increasingly replacing the European and Japanese tourists of yesterday.
I found the Chinese characters for the sculptor’s name at the base of the statue of King during my own visit to the memorial.
From Thailand’s temples and shopping malls to Italy’s boutiques and
ancient monuments, nations around the world are witnessing Asia’s, and
particularly China’s economic rise, also in the form of tens of
thousands of new visitors. Large numbers of Chinese who had once dreamed
of traveling abroad now have the opportunity and money to do so, much
as earlier decades saw Japanese and Korean tourists join the ranks of
global travelers.
How fitting it would be if Lei’s sculpture were to help bring the
late civil rights leaders’ messages of equality, social justice and
empowerment to Asia and particularly to the growing number of China’s
increasingly globe-trotting tourists, their fellow citizens and leaders,
all in pursuit of the “Chinese dream.”
“I have a dream,” King preached from the steps of the Lincoln
Memorial in Washington before a massive seated statue of President
Abraham Lincoln, “that one day this nation will rise up, live out the
true meaning of its creed: ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident:
that all men are created equal.’ …
“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a
nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by
the content of their character.”
Whether Atlanta or Beijing, or Bangkok or Yangon, King’s messages
still have relevance today to everyday citizens still struggling for
greater economic freedom and opportunity.
Beyond the all too many T-shirts, key chains and other items
seemingly sourced from China for America’s gift shops or expensive
luxury items from name-brand designer boutiques, let’s hope that King’s
message of peace and empowerment is one added souvenir that is brought
back by visitors to the U.S. to their own home countries everywhere.