ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 3月29日 02時27分


March for Our Lives. The Millions March. The Sacramento protest over the fatal shooting of Stephon Clark. Had he survived, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. would have been there, walking, talking, listening, present, as he was for countless body-on-the-line campaigns for social justice in the 1950s and ’60s. Dr. King’s death shook the nation. In the years that followed, the Lorraine Motel slowly fell into disrepair until, in 1991, it was rescued and reopened as the National Civil Rights Museum (@ncrmuseum). An expansion in 2014 brought in new visitors. And the 50th anniversary of the King assassination should bring in more. A special exhibition, starting April 4, will compare contemporary events with King’s Poor People’s Campaign and sanitation strike. What visitors will find in the museum’s permanent collection is “a monument to a movement and, secondarily, to a man, in a display that focuses on difficult, sometimes ambiguous historical data more than on pure celebration,” writes Holland Cotter, co-chief art critic of @ニューヨーク・タイムズ. “And they’ll find, if they are patient, useful information for the 2018 present, and for the future.” @andreamorales took this photo of visitors at the @ncrmuseum looking at the former rooming house from which Dr. King’s killer fired the fatal shot.


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