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DeKalb church celebrates King’s dream

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Joseph Mitchell, co-pastor, speaks to the crowd about the second inauguration of President Barack Obama on Monday during the Martin Luther King Jr. community celebration at the New Hope Missionary Baptist Church in DeKalb. (Erik Anderson – For the Daily Chronicle)

DeKALB – In the 50 years after Martin Luther King Jr. told the world that he had a dream, Tammy Shered believes that dream is half-accomplished.

“The dream has manifested,” said the DeKalb resident, referring to interracial marriage, gay marriage and desegregation as examples of progress. “But now we have to keep the dream going and add on to the dream and move forward.”

Charlese Williams, a 12-year-old student at Christian Cornerstone Academy in Sycamore, agreed that King’s work isn’t done.

“Building our nation up, working together as a community,” Charlese said in regard to what needed to be done.

They were two of at least 70 people who attended “The Beloved Community: Faces That Inspire” event Monday evening at New Hope Missionary Baptist Church.

The service featured pastors from New Hope, First Congregational Church and Federated Church, reading about the lives and works of King, John Perkins and Clarence Jordan.

King, a Baptist minister, first came to prominence in 1955 by leading a bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala. His work and reputation spread across the nation, culminating with him earning the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964.

Perkins was also a civil rights activist of the time, starting a number of community organizations in Mississippi. Jordan’s work with a small but dedicated religious community eventually served as the inspiration for Habitat for Humanity.

The pastors touched on the many similarities of King, Perkins and Jordan. In addition to being advocates of racial equality, they were all men who renewed their faith after suffering a particular crisis. And they were advocates of peace.

“They did not return evil with evil,” said Angela Baron-Jeffrey, an assistant pastor at New Hope, on the three men’s commitment to peaceful methods and responses in the face of violence.

Shered, whose family arrived in the county in the early 1900s, said she has seen community progress tremendously, but she commented that there’s still work to be done.

“As we reach the young people ... they see no color. They see everybody the same,” Shered said. “We have to learn to look like the children. We have to speak with the mind of a child sometimes. We need to be the beloved community, because God loves all of us.”

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