Since his assassination in 1968, more than a thousand streets have been named after Martin Luther King Jr. But after over a year of disputes and hostility, one city where youโll no longer find a boulevard honoring the civil rights icon is in Kansas City, Mo.
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New York Times reports that on Tuesday, the community voted in favor of removing Kingโs name from a historic boulevard that runs through the cityโs predominantly black eastside, making Kansas City one of the largest cities in the country without a street honoring the late minister and civil rights activist.
โShameful day for Kansas City,โ Rev. Dr. Vernon P. Howard Jr., president of the cityโs chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said. โ[This decision has] set us decades back in the march toward racial justice and racial inclusion.โ
Whatโs interesting is that while youโd assume that black folks would be unanimously in favor of honoring King in this manner, Kansas Cityโs black community are divided on the issue.
From the Times:
But those who wanted the street returned to its former name, Paseo Boulevard, heralded the result as a win for a black community that they say was ignored when the decision to change the name to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard was first made.
โDr. Kingโs dream is real,โ said Alissia Canady, a black former councilwoman who opposed naming the street for Dr. King. โAnd black voters wonโt allow anybody, black or otherwise, to disenfranchise them in Kansas City.โ
Racial connotationsโwhich seemingly factored heavily into this decisionโaside, whatโs also at play is how the initial name change impacted business, tourism, and the historical significance of Paseo Boulevard. It was completed in 1899 and is the first boulevard in the city.
However, itโs only fair to note that while the โSave the Paseoโ movement accrued thousands of signatures for its cause and garnered support from black residents, it is helmed by a pair of white womenโand its membership is not only predominantly white, but most of them donโt even live on that street.
โThis is white-led, trying to dictate to the African-American community who it honors, where theyโre honored, how theyโre honored,โ Howard said. โWe believe that is systemic and structural racism.โ
There are black residents who push back on that narrative and insist that while theyโre in favor of reinstating the Paseo name, that doesnโt mean theyโre against honoring King. They merely would prefer to find other ways to do so.
โI know who I work with,โ Kellie Jones, who lives on Paseo, said. โItโs black and brown people, itโs disenfranchised people and itโs people who feel like they do not have a voice.โ
And to that end, it appears the people have spoken.
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