The daughter of a former political aide had no idea she had a piece of #history sitting in a drawer. In May 1964, less than a year after making his “I have a dream” speech, Martin Luther King Jr. (#MLK) delivered remarks at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum that highlighted the need for justice and called for an end to segregation, as Senators in Washington, D.C., debated the Civil Rights Act. “Now is the time to make real the promises of #democracy,” King said. “Now is the time to open the floodgates of opportunity and allow now an avalanche of justice to pour upon us. Now is the time to get rid of #segregation and discrimination. Now is the time to make justice a reality for all of God’s children. This is the challenge of the hour.” Barbara Moss’s father, Jay A. Brown, worked as an assistant to Democratic Rep. Thomas Rees and attended the event, capturing it in color film. “What me and my mother can figure is that my father probably took his camera with him this day—he always had his camera—and by some miracle popped in color film into the camera,” Moss tells TIME. Describing him as a "purger," she was surprised to find these pictures. “These are an American treasure, they shouldn’t be in a drawer,” she said. “If Martin Luther King were alive today, what would he be saying now?” she wondered. “His message was so important and resonates today clearly.” Read the full story, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by Jay A. Brown, courtesy of the Brown family

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TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 1月22日 02時57分


The daughter of a former political aide had no idea she had a piece of #history sitting in a drawer. In May 1964, less than a year after making his “I have a dream” speech, Martin Luther King Jr. (#MLK) delivered remarks at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum that highlighted the need for justice and called for an end to segregation, as Senators in Washington, D.C., debated the Civil Rights Act. “Now is the time to make real the promises of #democracy,” King said. “Now is the time to open the floodgates of opportunity and allow now an avalanche of justice to pour upon us. Now is the time to get rid of #segregation and discrimination. Now is the time to make justice a reality for all of God’s children. This is the challenge of the hour.” Barbara Moss’s father, Jay A. Brown, worked as an assistant to Democratic Rep. Thomas Rees and attended the event, capturing it in color film. “What me and my mother can figure is that my father probably took his camera with him this day—he always had his camera—and by some miracle popped in color film into the camera,” Moss tells TIME. Describing him as a "purger," she was surprised to find these pictures. “These are an American treasure, they shouldn’t be in a drawer,” she said. “If Martin Luther King were alive today, what would he be saying now?” she wondered. “His message was so important and resonates today clearly.” Read the full story, and see more pictures, at the link in bio. Photograph by Jay A. Brown, courtesy of the Brown family


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