April 7, 2008
CommonDreams.org
Common Bond for Uncommon Men: Roberto Clemente and Martin Luther King
by Dave Zirin
As we remember the 40th anniversary of that dark day of April 4th 1968, when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was gunned down in Memphis, it’s worth recalling the reaction by Pittsburgh Pirates All-Star Roberto Clemente.
Clemente was devastated by the news of King’s assassination but didn’t suffer in silence. Instead, he led a charge to prevent the Pirates and Astros from opening their season on April 8th, the day before King’s burial. He convinced his teammates on the Pirates, which included 11 African Americans, to stand with him. Opening Day was moved to April 10th, and Roberto Clemente had put sports in its proper perspective.
It might seem odd that Clemente, a proud Puerto Rican national, would have led such an extraordinary action. But Clemente, who had a passionate belief in social and economic justice, considered King a personal hero. He had even met face to face with Dr. King, spending a day together on Clemente’s farm in Puerto Rico.
Clemente’s affinity for King and the civil rights movement was rooted in his own experience with racism in the United States. Clemente played from 1954 to 1972, years that saw profound change in both Major League Baseball and U.S. society. His career spanned the entirety of the black freedom struggle from the Montgomery Bus Boycotts to the urban ghetto rebellions; from Rosa Parks to the Black Panthers. Being raised in a proud Puerto Rican household did not prepare Clemente for the racism he encountered in the U.S. Even as a dark-skinned Puerto Rican, Clemente never knew of the existence of racism before coming to the U.S. mainland. He would tell reporters that he learned that dark skin “was bad over here.”
Please read the entire article at:
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/04/07/8125/