In an appeal to America to boycott the abortion industry, Dr. Alveda
King, daughter of Reverend A. D. King and niece of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. responds to the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Rights
press conference.
"It is absolutely ludicrous that abortion supporters would accuse a
blood relative of Dr. King of hijacking the King legacy. Uncle Martin
and my father, Rev. A. D. King were blood brothers. How can I hijack
something that belongs to me? I am an heir to the King Family legacy,"
she said. "I have a right to stand at the Lincoln Memorial on the
47th Anniversary of my Uncle's 'I Have A Dream' speech. The Dream has
yet to be realized. That Dream is in my genes and I carry forward in
the fight for equality and justice for all blacks, including those in
the womb. My dad and my uncle gave their lives to ensure that the
day would come when blacks would be judged not by the color of their
skin, but the content of their character. If they were here, I know
they would stand with me in this fight for the lives of those most
vulnerable among us," said King.
Other African American leaders are joining Alveda in calling for a
boycott of the abortion industry.
"It's interesting to me to hear so called religious people call us the
religious right -- but that's okay because they are obviously the
complete opposite... they are the religious wrong! Which begs the
question... what God -- if any do they serve?" asked Day Gardner,
President of the National Black Pro-Life Union. "As for me, I
serve the God of Abraham, Jacob and Isaac -- the great I AM... Father
of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and all things created. Those
of us who serve the one true God acknowledge we are all made in his
image. We bow to God's Word when He says: 'Blessed is the fruit of the
womb.' If God says children are a reward, a gift and our heritage, then
we must uphold that all children are greatly valuable and desirable to
God. So, I ask again... what God do they serve?"
"More and more of Black Americans understand the eugenic agenda of
Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers to control the black
birth rate through abortion. And because we understand, we are standing
with Alveda King in solidarity, continuing the fight for black life
from its earliest beginnings," said Catherine Davis, founding member of
the black prolife movement. "I grew up understanding that the King
family fought for my right to equality, even as they fought, bled and
died for my right to life, free of government sanctioned lynching,
restraints, and KKK threats. To believe that they would now stand for
the destruction of life in the womb, screams against the legacy these
great men left for us all."
"I will stand with Alveda King because she is courageous enough to
follow in her uncle's and father's footsteps," said Gardner. "The
travesty of abortion -- especially in the black community is the
greatest civil rights battle of our time and we must overcome it -- in
Christ, we shall overcome it."
"I have a dream, it is in my genes and I ask all America to stand with
me on 8/28 at the Lincoln Memorial and thereafter by boycotting
America's abortion industry," said Dr. King.