And how were you yourself feeling in Memphis at that time, both around the strike and your mood in general on the eve of his assassination?
Well the unease was that we were organizing ministers to use economic leverage to try to get the corporations to challenge the mayor to recognize sanitation workers. We were challenging students to get involved in it and remain nonviolent and disciplined, and trying to get these workers their collective-bargaining rights that would apply to workers across the country.
And then he was killed so suddenly, so dramatically, six o’clock in the afternoon on a cold April day. April 4th, 1968.
Tell me more about that. You were at the motel?
I was coming across the courtyard. We had been practicing some songs that night, some freedom songs, and we were supposed to leave around 5. It was around 6. He said, “Jesse, you’re an hour late.” I said, “Doc, you an hour late.” I said, “We’ve been waiting for you.” He said, “You don’t even have on a shirt and tie, and we going to Reverend Kyles’ home for dinner.” I said, “Dr. King, the prerequisite for eating is an appetite—not a tie.” He said, “You’re crazy.” We laughed. He looked down [over the balcony, into the parking lot] at Ben Branch, who we had heard play “Precious Lord” on the saxophone two weeks before in Chicago. He said, ”Please do my favorite song tonight,” and he raised his head and…pow. Bullet hit him right in the neck. We heard someone say, “Get low. Get low. Get …”
So we ran for the steps to go up because we thought if it had been an automatic weapon, it would get several of us at the same time, but that was not the case. The next thing was Andy [Young] and Reverend Kyles and them pointing over toward where the bullet had come from and saying to the police with their guns drawn, “The bullet came from that way.” Dr. King was lying in the meantime, with his foot on the railing. He had been knocked against the wall. And then Mr. [Ernest] Withers the photographer, scooped up a couple drops of blood. It was an eerie scene.
Reverend [Ralph] Abernathy said, “Get back. Get back. My friend Martin…Martin, you can’t leave me. You can’t leave us now.” I got to wiping my hands off and went next door to my room, which was next to his room and called Mrs. King. She was in the bed reading. I said, “Mrs. King, Dr. King I think has been shot, I think in the shoulder, but you should come here.” I really couldn’t say what I saw. It was like too much to say. And she said, “I’ll come immediately.” And no doubt, the press called her within the next 10 minutes and so she found out he was dead.
And then all hell broke loose for a while. We had to figure out what were the best strategic ways to fulfill his dream.
And we had to make a decision. Should we bow down and stop fighting? Should we adjust? Or should we fight back? We were determined we would not let one bullet kill the movement. We kept fighting in his honor, kept fighting back to increase voter registration, to build multiracial coalitions, to fight poverty and to fight to end of the war in Vietnam.
Often, when people listen to King’s ‘Mountaintop’ speech now, it sounds prophetic. How aware was Dr. King of his own mortality? Did he ever talk about that?
We knew that the threats against him were intense, after Hoover had convinced the attorney general to allow the FBI to tap Dr. King’s phone at home and his office phone and tap hotel-room phones, pay hotel workers to see if there was semen on the sheets. They tried to disrupt and discredit, destroy him in any way that they could to break his spirit. But they were not successful at it.
So, we knew the government was involved in the attempt to stop him. They thought his fight against the war in Vietnam was against national interest. So it seems to me that when he said to us [that his flight into Memphis the day before had been delayed because of a bomb threat directed at him], we thought that was what he was referring to [in his “Mountaintop” speech] later that night when he said, “I am not fearing any man. My eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord.” He was referring to what had happened in Atlanta [at the airport]—not what may happen the next day—but what had happened just the day before.