Reverend Bernice King
Tonight, freedom rings! From the snow-capped Rockies of Colorado, freedom rings!
Forty-five years ago today, my father delivered his “I have a dream” speech. Tonight, we witness in part what has become of his dream, the acceptance of a Democratic presidential nominee, decided not by the color of his skin, but by the content of his character.
This is one of our nation’s greatest defining moments. Forty-five years later, I am proud to introduce another Martin Luther King, the first-born son of our parents Martin and Coretta King, born into the generation that would realize the dream and who leads the organization Realizing the Dream Inc., through which he addresses pressing issues confronting our nation and world, such as health care, education, values, poverty and war. He is a human rights activist, a man on the move.
Please welcome the son of the dream and my dear brother, Martin Luther King III.







