FROM THE KITCHEN TABLE, JANUARY, 2026
YAKIMA,
WASHINGTON—TO THE WASHINGTON CATHEDRAL,
31 MARCH 1968—LETTER
TO PASTOR MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR.
PART II
I. After the
Sermon
You’re greeting
the congregation, Dr. King,
taking our hands
as we file out,
and we’re slow
go not letting go of your hand.
This is your last
public sermon
and this time we
get it.
You’ve just
stepped down
from the
Canterbury Pulpit
Cathedral Church
of St. Peter & St. Paul,
commonly known as
Washington Cathedral.
March 31, 1968.
●
15 March 2026
II. Dear Pastor
King,
I’m going to call
you pastor, Dr. King.
That’s what you
are for me, Pastor King, my pastor,
and I’m coming
from the pew. I, know, too,
your titles, and the
epithets that come with you,
and I’m still
inflated by it all, from the Canterbury Pulpit
to your place at the
right hand of God.
We’re getting
ready for your birthday.
I’m walking before
breakfast listening with hearing aids.
I’m 80, and no
longer need to embellish. You’re telling us
about Rip Van
Winkel, how he slept for 20 years,
sleeping right
through a revolution.
King George III. We
have other worries now--
Yakima, Central
Washington State, it’s cold, and the ink won’t run
in my pen. I take
notes on the recipe card while walking. For the Pecan Pie
I made for your
birthday.
On this day, end
of March, 1968,
I’m 22 years old,
85th Evac Hospital, Qui Nhon, Viet Nam
during the Battle of
Tet begun on New Year’s lasting until
Johnson finally
stopped the bombing. I’ll pick up there.
It’s my job to get
our guys off choppers and onto planes
and out of the
country to Japan, Philippines, or, closer to you
in D.C. at Walter
Reed—Ft. Sam Houston for burned bodies.
I can relate to what
you say about just to have crumbs,
about the appalling
silence and indifference of good people.
I didn’t hear it
then. I did, but. It wasn’t exactly chronological.
I had a teacher in
high school, 1963, who told us, broke your story--
but I didn’t know,
then, you wrote that Letter from Birmingham Jail,
then, 16 April 1963.
No, I didn’t. Then, that, that I didn’t know.
When I did know,
later, I put your Letter from Birmingham
into my New
Testament. It’s right there next to Paul’s letters.
But in March 1968,
I’m at the 85th Evac, a GI.
And I’m bunkered
with medics and we’re black and white,
and we’re
brothers, as you say from The Canterbury Pulpit,
...standing in
brutal solidarity...young black men
and young white men,
fighting and killing
in brutal soldarity,
that is us.
And in a few
days,
when you are
murdered,
that’s where we
are, and that’s where I am.
And when you are
killed, GI’s in Vietnam,
we’re all
wondering what just happened. You say,
Dante couldn’t
imagine it. We’re using other words,
talking in GI. And
writing home. Writing home.
Brothers in Black
and White. And that’s how
I remember those
days—and Bobby Kennedy’s
still alive. No
confusion there. “They send us
to Vietnam, and when
we’re done here, they’re
going to send us
back to the United States.”
What I won’t
know for years,
Dr. King—I do slip
in and out of those titles,
is that this is
what’s in my letters. We’re together
in that hospital,
one in bunkered solidarity, telling
this cruel joke on
ourselves. “That’s what’s going
to happen.” It’s
in my letters to Karen. When I found
those letters she
saved, I felt redeemed. You say
in that last
sermon...and when they come home
they can’t
hardly live on the same block together.
Being part of the
cruel joke is part of our blessing.
Dr. King, what I
want to tell you
in this letter is
this. We’re in the same pew.
We’re in the same
block, too. Always have been.
It hasn’t been
like this for everybody,
but that’s how it
is here, with me, with us.
III. HOLDING ON
TO PASTOR MARTIN’S HAND
I’ve been holding
onto this one over 50 years, Pastor Martin.
I’m conscious of
the man beside me, I am,
but this time, not
my time, but we’ve been in line
a long time. I’m
talking to you in a letter
and I’ve got
grand-kids, grown now,
and I’m talking to
them through you,
in your words,
through that pulpit over time,
and then there’s
my notes from what you
said on that toilet
paper from Birmingham Jail.
I’m just coming to
that,
They can hear that
direct from me.
Dr. King.
Yes. That sermon.
That’s life.
Life in that sermon
that’s not going
away never.
Jim Bodeen
15 January 2026