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Dream Reborn

Posted by Brave New Films, AlterNet at 10:19 AM on April 12, 2008.


A Green Summit in Memphis to Honor MLK

More than a thousand people gathered in Memphis last week for The Dream Reborn, a green conference that celebrated Martin Luther King, Jr.'s incredible life and legacy.

Van Jones reported from the event:

It was beautiful. The "Dream Reborn" conference was the first "green" summit to honor MLK and explicitly link his vision of justice to the emerging green economy. For everyone who attended, it seemed to be a transformative, life-changing experience.

For years and years, conventional wisdom has held that no "green conference" could attract people of color or low-income people. It was always assumed that attendance at such summits would always be 90 percent white and overwhelmingly affluent.

Not this time. More than 70 percent of the 1,200 attendees were people of color. And more than half of all attendees were of modest means; as a result, they qualified for some level of "scholarship" support to attend the three-day event. (Thanks to the generosity of Green For All's supporters, we were able to raise enough money to financially support hundreds of people who would have been unable to come otherwise.)

As a result, the conference didn't just LOOK totally different. It FELT totally different. From the main stage, we heard drums, prayers, choirs, poetry, and speeches that sounded more like passionate "civil rights" sermons. From the audience, we heard cheers, chants, shouts and - sometimes - sobs.

And during workshop times, the conference center looked like a ghost town. That is because few attendees lingered in the hallways, chatting and socializing and trading business cards. Instead, they crammed themselves into every chair, covered every bit of floor space, stood along the walls - hungry to learn how they could make their own neighborhoods and cities bloom as green oases of prosperity.

During the day, the plenaries, panels, workshops and sessions were packed and over-flowing with people of color, labor leaders and white people from struggling communities. And at night, slam poets grabbed the microphones, dance music took over the sound system and laughter filled the sidewalks and streets around the conference center. Outside of a church revival, I have never seen so many people of color laughing, crying and hugging.

In fact, I have never experienced the kind of energy I felt throughout the convening. Good reason, apparently. Civil right veterans in attendance were openly weeping; they said they had experienced nothing like it since the 1960s.

Something powerful shifted on April Fourth.

Dr. King was only 39 when an assassin gunned him down. He has been gone for 40 years now, longer than he was ever here. Those of us born since his murder - two generations of adults, plus a rising batch of teen-agers - have a duty to reimagine the Dream for a new century - and to make it into a reality.

On April Fourth, a critical mass of us decided to do just that.

Below, I offer the reflections of some of the bloggers and reporters who attended.

And for photos and videos, I invite you to check out: DreamReborn.org and GreenForAll.org.

I hope that some of the joy generated at the conference spills over into your day.

Green for all,

Van

P.S. In case you don't know: Green For All is a new, national, advocacy organization. I am the founder and president; urban eco-heroine Majora Carter is the co-founder. We are working to build an inclusive green economy, strong enough to lift millions of people out of poverty. Having spun off from the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights in January, we are especially focused on increasing green-collar jobs and opportunities in disadvantaged communities.

April 4-6, over one thousand people gathered in Memphis, TN to celebrate Martin Luther King Jr's extraordinary life and present positive solutions from today's generation of visionary leaders. A bullet killed the dreamer, but not the dream. In this video, participants share their new dreams for a new century, and their visions for a new movement.


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