| History 101 |
| Written by Dave Palumbo | |
| Thursday, 08 February 2007 | |
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Once again, February is upon us; and while the thought of my 39th birthday on the 17th should be first and foremost on my mind, it's the fact that February is Black History Month that's really got me thinking. You see, it was something that the late, great, civil rights leader, Martin Luther King Jr., once said that sparked this keen state of introspection.
"We must learn to live together as brothers or perish together as fools."
When you take a close look at the current state of online bodybuilding forums you'll understand where I'm coming from. As I scan these negative energy-plagued message boards, I can't help but compare the plight of the bodybuilder to that of the disadvantaged Afro-American.
King explained it perfectly when he said:
"Every man must decide whether he will walk in the light of creative altruism or in the darkness of destructive selfishness."
I pray for the sport of bodybuilding. I pray for the athletes. I pray for the fans and supporters. I pray for a future where innovative, progressive, ideas may be shared and exchanged among the entire brothership of bodybuilders the world over.
I leave you this month with the following poem that was written by my father, Salvatore R. Palumbo, in remembrance of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
FREE AT LAST
In the martyr’s sense of tragedy He saved the soul of America!
Which had tried for most of its away the very race it had long suppressed for centuries, until he ignited the flaming torch of a dream he’d had in the image graven Shadow of the Lincoln Memorial
--binding together the wounds of His cross to bear! And all of a nation’s tragedy
. . . as though having been killed
And who could resist the
Or the ideal born on wings A nation’s pride!
Like echoes of the cracked
Free at last! Free at last!
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