Byย Frances Murphy (Toni) Draper | Word In Black
(WIB) โ Letโs call this what it is.
The suddenย release of over 230,000 pages of FBI files on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.ย โ two years ahead of schedule โ is not about transparency. Itโs a calculated, racially motivated campaign to tarnish the legacy of one of Americaโs greatest moral leaders. Discredit the man. Discredit the movement. Then, discredit the holiday.
Once public trust frays, the question becomes: Why honor him at all?
This latest move unfolds amid a broader reactionary wave: voter suppression, book bans, attacks on civil rights โ all aimed at rewriting history. Dr. King, the moral backbone of nonviolent protest, is the latest target. First comes character assassination via selective FBI leaks, next comes โdebateโ over whether he deserves a day on the federal calendar.
Letโs talk timing โ or rather, twisted purpose.ย Charlie Kirk, a far-right activist and founder of Turning Point USA,ย recently declared, โMLK was awful โฆ not a good person.โ His real issue? That King helped usher in the Civil Rights Act of 1964 โ a law Kirk now calls โa huge mistake.โ Other right-wing voices suggestย replacingย MLK Day with Juneteenth, calling him โheinousโ and using long-debunked allegations to justify erasing him from memory.
These arenโt just fringe opinions โ theyโre test balloons. Once public trust frays, the question becomes: Why honor him at all?
The holiday is not a handout. It is a moral marker.
We have a stark warning fromย Fort Gregg-Adams, recentlyย renamed back to Fort Lee. The base, once named for a Confederate general, was renamed in 2023 to honor two distinguished Black military heroes: Lt. Gen. Arthur Gregg and Lt. Col. Charity Adams, commander of the 6888thย Central Postal Battalion. Two years later, the base was renamedย again โ this time after Pvt. Fitz Lee, a Buffalo soldier. A symbolic walk-back dressed in careful language, but make no mistake: it was a retreat. A retreat from reckoning with history. A retreat from centering Black excellence. A retreat that reeks of political calculation.
The same playbook applies elsewhere. Take the recent removal ofย Dr. Carla Haydenย as Librarian of Congress. The first Black and first female appointee to the post, Dr. Hayden is an esteemed champion of access, literacy, and the preservation of marginalized voices. Yet, in a sudden and unexplained move, her leadership was pushed aside under pressure from those who claimed her stewardship was โtoo politicalโโcode, in many circles, for being too inclusive. Too committed to truth. Too willing to tell the full story.
If they can quietly sideline Dr. Carla Haydenโฆ
If they can erase Fort Gregg-Adamsโฆ
If they can ban books by Black authors and call it curriculum reformโฆ
If they can target AP African American Studies and claim it lacks โeducational valueโโฆ
If they can question the legitimacy of the Civil Rights Actโฆ
If they can tell lies about Dr. King and expect no accountabilityโฆ
What makes us think theyโll stop short of dismantling MLK Day?
These attacks are not about the past.
Legally, repealing the holiday would require an act of Congress. Itโs never been done before. But in an era when cultural memory is increasingly shaped by ideology and outrage, the unthinkable becomes possible.
Letโs be clear: Dr. King didnโt march for a day off. He marched for justice โ for a multiracial democracy that still struggles to be realized. The holiday is not a handout. It is a moral marker. Thatโs precisely why itโs in the crosshairs.
These attacks are not about the past. Theyโre about controlling the future. About silencing symbols that inspire progress. About rewriting American memory in ways that serve fear, not freedom.
Theย AFROย has always been on the frontlines of the fight for equality โ speaking truth to power, exposing injustice, and amplifying Black voices. Weโve done it for more than 130 years, and weโre not stopping now.
We must heed the warning signs. Because if they can do all this in plain sight, imagine what theyโll try to do next.

Frances โToniโ Draper is the publisher of the AFRO-American Newspaper (the AFRO), with offices in Baltimore, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.
