Martin Luther King was a great speaker. This "I Have a Dream" speech was just vivid and eloquent, so that anyone with normal brain was to be touched.
I'm sure everyone, again, with a normal Human brain, would agree with my feedback to his speech. So I'd like to talk about something different that his speech also helps us think about.
I've realized that Martin Luther King Jr., in his own speeches, always called the African-Americans "Negros."
Negro just meant black color just like "noir" in French, and Kepi Noir (Black Cap) is the symbol of leadership in French armed forces (only the Officers and NCOs wear the black one). Besides, as far as I know there are at least two rivers called Negro in Latin America, meaning Black River.
We don’t feel offended either when we hear somebody talking about the “Black Knights.” Actually the Marine aviation “Black Knights” squadron leader was an African-American Captain, who made me join the Marine Corps; he was my dream (It wasn't just in the movie "Independence Day (1996)", but the squadron really existed in El Toro, CA, where I grew up, until 1996).
However, today the word "Negro" is demeaning and tabooed, just like "Josen-jin", which simply meant Chosun-iin (the Koreans from the Kingdom of Chosun) in Japanese, but Koreans hate that word like the African-Americans today hate Negro calling that the "N" word. See how things change in our language lives?
I think reading the speech once again turned out very meaningful after all.
…with this faith, we will be able to hew out of the mountain of despair a stone of hope. With this faith, we will be able to transform the jangling discords of our nation into a beautiful symphony of brotherhood. With this faith, we will be able to work together...
- Martin Luther King, Jr. in his famous "I Have a Dream" speech at Lincoln Memorial on August 28, 1963