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Erika Dreifus

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Erika Dreifus,

Erika Dreifus

Opinion

My personal king and very own Queen Esther

As America remembers the influential Martin Luther King, our columnist recalls those who most influenced her life

January 12, 2018 12:39
King speaking to an anti-Vietnam war rally at the University of Minnesota in St. Paul, April 27, 1967 (Picture: Minnesota Historical Society)
3 min read

Were he alive today, Dr Martin Luther King Jr would be celebrating his 89th birthday next Monday, 15 January. Instead, Americans across the country that he influenced so profoundly will commemorate his life and legacy with a Federal holiday.

Born one year after King’s 1968 assassination, I possess no memories of his role in the modern American civil-rights movement. But everything that I’ve learned has been accentuated by two American Jews whose lives intersected with both King’s and mine: my mother’s Aunt Esther and my father’s mentor Abraham (Abe) Briloff.

A New Yorker from her childhood immigration in 1920 until she died in 2005, Esther taught me about “social justice” long before I encountered the term. I cannot remember when I didn’t know that she “marched with Dr King” in the South. I’ve always perceived her action, as a “white” Jewish woman, as exceptional (and exceptionally brave). But, eventually, I realised that, for Esther, marching was a simple matter of doing what was right — and following her hero’s example.

Esther, who had no children of her own, shared an extraordinarily close relationship with my mother. Esther’s most prized possessions — including the title page of her copy of King’s 1963 Why We Can’t Wait, which he autographed for her— are now my mother’s. This Shabbat, as she does every year at this time, Mom will lend this precious item to our synagogue as part of the annual congregational commemoration of King’s life and leadership — which includes a speaker sponsored by my parents in Aunt Esther’s memory.