WHEREAS, Today, January 15, 2007, communities and neighborhoods all
across our state and nation remember, celebrate, and honor the life and
work of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; and
WHEREAS, Dr. King's commitment to nonviolence, based in great part
upon the life-teachings of Mohandas Gandhi, was a model of selflessness
and sacrifices made so that later generations might live freer and
fuller, and might more nearly live in accord with their possibilities;
and
WHEREAS, Dr. King was born on January 15, 1929, in Atlanta,
Georgia; and on June 18, 1953, he and Coretta Scott were married in
Marion, Alabama; and
WHEREAS, After Dr. King was so violently taken from us on April 4,
1968, Coretta Scott King continued her life in the very same vein of
caring and compassion until she passed on January 30, 2006; and
WHEREAS, The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. advanced his
goals and principles with determination, faith, dignity, and courage in
the face of life-threatening opposition; and
WHEREAS, Dr. King was jailed several times throughout his struggle
to bring to all people the opportunity to live free of racial, ethnic,
and religious discrimination and violence; and
WHEREAS, Dr. King raised the consciousness of the nation and of our
state to fundamental injustices and inequalities in American society,
and moved us forward on the long and unfinished road to racial harmony
and reconciliation; and
WHEREAS, The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. fervently
advocated nonviolent resistance as the strategy to end segregation and
racial discrimination in America, and he was awarded the 1964 Nobel
Peace Prize; and
WHEREAS, Dr. King's death, an awful loss for our nation and our
world, was a particular loss for our own state of Washington in which
our largest county is named to honor this great American hero; and
WHEREAS, Dr. King was forever celebrated when the Congress of the
United States established a permanent federal holiday to commemorate
the date of his birth; and
WHEREAS, Dr. King's work and legacy were further recognized by the
state of Washington, which honors his remembrance as a state holiday;
and
WHEREAS, There is still much work to be done in achieving full
reconciliation among America's racial, social, and ethnic communities;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives,
on behalf of the people of our state, recognize the importance of the
life and work of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to the civil
society and freedoms of the United States of America and of the state
of Washington; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives call on
the people of the state of Washington to study, reflect on, and
celebrate Dr. King's life and ideals in order to fulfill his dream of
civil and human rights for all people; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, That the House of Representatives honor his
memory by urging all the citizens of our state to make Martin Luther
King, Jr. Day a day of service - a day on, not a day off.