The Pop Culture Junkie | Get Addicted
Monday, November 13, 2006
Members of the official party, including Rev. Jesse Jackson (2nd R), Dorothy Height (4th R), Andrew Young (5th R), Rev. Al Sharpton (6th R), U.S. Rep. John Lewis D-GA (4th L) and Martin Luther King III (2nd L), take their places at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial on the National Mall in Washington, November 13, 2006.

The full story and pictures from this very emotional event under the cut...


Under overcast skies, Bush joined former
President Clinton and a host of civil rights figures and members of Congress to celebrate the monument to be built not far from where King gave his "I Have a Dream" speech on Aug. 28, 1963.

"When Martin Luther King came to Washington in the summer of 1963," Bush said, "he came to hold this nation to its own standards. ... He stood not far from here ... with thousands gathered around him. His dream spread a message of hope."

"An assassin's bullet could not shatter his dream," Bush said. "As we break ground, we give Martin Luther King his rightful place among the many Americans honored on the National Mall. It will unite the men who declared the promise of America and defended the promise of America with the man who redeemed the promise of America."

The memorial, to be built roughly a half-mile from the Lincoln Memorial, where King gave his historic speech, will be the first to honor an African American civilian on the Mall.

Clinton, who received a standing ovation from the largely black crowd, noted that the memorial will stand between the Jefferson Memorial and the Lincoln Memorial. He said it is appropriate for King's memorial to be between the man who helped found the nation and the man who protected the nation's ideals during the Civil War.

"It belongs here," Clinton said.

About 5,000 people braved light rain, cold winds and mud for the ceremonial groundbreaking, including poet and novelist Maya Angelou, television personality
Oprah Winfrey, the Rev.
Jesse Jackson and several members of Congress.

Winfrey credited King and other civil rights leaders with making it possible for her to achieve what she's done.

"It's because of them that I can be heard," she said. "I do not take that for granted, not for one breath."

Donations for the memorial, which have mostly come from major corporations, hit $65.5 million earlier this month.






Rev. Jesse Jackson consoles former U.N. Ambassador Andrew Young
BeBe Winans embracing Former Pres. Clinton




Dr. King's children: Bernice Albertine, Martin Luther III, and Yolanda King




Oprah Winfrey offered her words


Legendary Maya Angelou, escorted to her seat by Russell Simmons


Rev. Jackson and others were overcome with emotion


Lawrence Fishburne


Barack Obama also spoke, along with President Bush.