The younger King’s remarkable life and legacy has been marked worldwide by local, national and global leaders since his death on Jan. 22 and supporters took part in a special ceremony for the “Keeper of the Dream” at the church located on historic Auburn Avenue in Atlanta. Lead by the remaining King children, Martin lll and Dr. Berniece King, and Scott King’s wife Leah, a host of celebrants including Ambassador Andrew, Sen. Ralph Warnock and entertainment legend Stevie Wonder, marked the event with an outpouring of remembrances and tributes.
“Dexter King was 62 years old when he passed and he was seven when his father passed,” explained former Atlanta mayor, U.S. Ambassador Andrew Young. “It really is rough growing up not only without a father, but with the expectations that your father was … a political savior of this nation, and we don’t want to do it, but we always look to the children to what their fathers did,” said Young. “It didn’t happen with the Kennedy’s it didn’t happen with anybody, but Dr. King’s children have done extremely well in following in his footsteps … Dexter took it upon himself as he grew older to be responsible for that legacy. … He took it upon himself to protect the right to use his [father’s] name respectfully at a very young age,” Young continued noting that the King Children, Dexter, Martin lll, Berniece and Yolanda King who died in 2007, had done a remarkable job of protecting and securing the slain civil rights leader’s papers documenting his…
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