City of Faith Supplement: Pilgrims/This is Not That Dawn Bibliography

City of Faith Title Treatment

Transcript | Pilgrims/This Is Not That Dawn, 2022 Utsa Hazarika 

Indian postage stamp (1969) featuring audio from Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Martin Luther King III, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, Hasan Minhaj, Femi Oke and Malika Bilal. 

Faiz: This stained light, this night-bitten dawn

King: When I was in India...

King III: I come, tracing my father and mother's steps... it all starts here

King: Leaders in and out of government
Organizations, particularly the Gandhi Smarak Nidhi
and the Quaker Center
and many homes and families, have done their utmost
to make our short stay both pleasant and instructive 

Minhaj: We're in this country because of protest
because of the Civil Rights Movement
The only reason so many of us are here
is because of the Immigration Act of '65
That law rode the wave of the Civil Rights Act of '64 

Faiz: The one we had longed for – this is not that dawn 

King: In the same setting, in theological seminary days
I had heard of Gandhi
But I remembered hearing a message by the  
President of Howard University, Dr. Mordecai Johnson  
who had just returned from India
He spoke in Philadelphia
on his trip to India, and the whole philosophy of Gandhi
and passive and non-violent resistance
I was so deeply moved by the message
that I went away and bought several books
on Gandhi and Gandhian technique
and at that point I became deeply influenced by Gandhi
never realizing that I would live in a situation where
it would be useful and meaningful 

Minhaj: Think of the chess moves
Martin gets Lyndon B. Johnson to sign
that sheet of paper
and little do we know
MLK cc'ed us on that email of progress
Because of that one signature 

Faiz: The one we had longed for – this is not that dawn 

Minhaj: America's story didn't start when we got here 

King: When I was in India...
one afternoon, I went down to speak
in the southern part of India
in a school that was attended by and large by  
young boys and girls who were
the children of former untouchables
I remember that afternoon that the principal
got up to introduce me
he said I would like to present to you
a fellow untouchable from the United States of America
and for the moment I was peeved, I was shocked
that I would be introduced as an untouchable 

Minhaj: A Black man was murdered in cold blood
and we were on the fucking sidelines, watching

Ambedkar: Mere washing off of untouchability is of no consequence
We have been carrying on with untouchability for the
last two thousand years, nobody has bothered about it 

Minhaj: But hey, it's not our fight right? 

Femi Oke: Mahatma Gandhi is famous worldwide for his
non-violent resistance to British colonial rule 
but last week, University of Ghana officials removed
his statue from the campus, citing complaints from
faculty and students that he was racist towards
Black Africans 

King: Pretty soon my mind ran back across to America 

Faiz: This is not that dawn, this is not that dawn  
which we had set out hoping to find
someplace, somewhere

King: and I started thinking about the fact that there
were so many places that I couldn't go  
because of the color of my skin 

Minhaj: Twenty percent of Muslims in America are Black
we don't even like praying at the same mosques 

Ambedkar: Nobody cares about Hindu temples now
The untouchables have become so conscious of the fact
that temple-going is of no consequence at all
You live in the untouchable quarter just the same
whether you went into the temple, or whether you
didn't enter the temple 

King: My twenty million brothers and sisters
in the Negro community of America
still at the bottom of the economic ladder 

Ambedkar: We want untouchability to be abolished, you see
but we also want, you see,
that we must be given equal opportunities, you see
so that we may rise to the level of the other classes 

King: deprived of adequate housing conditions
unable to live in numerous neighborhoods 
because of the color of their skin 

Ambedkar: Mr. Gandhi was totally opposed – totally opposed

Faiz: The one we had longed for – this is not that dawn 

Bilal: This is just the latest attack against Africans in India
where tens of thousands of students
from the continent study
Now African embassies are urging the
United Nations Human Rights Council to investigate 

King III: I come, tracing my father and mother's steps
but also, following in the steps of Gandhi
It all starts here 

Ambedkar: He was never a Mahatma
And I refuse to call him Mahatma 

King: And I had to say to myself I am an untouchable
Segregation is evil and sinful because it stigmatizes
the segregated as an untouchable in a caste system
We have a moral edict, a moral mandate
to work to get rid of this unjust and evil system
if the American dream is to be a reality 

Minhaj: We think we're not a part of the story
but we're at the scene of the crime 

List of Sources
- Dr. B.R. Ambedkar interviewed by the BBC, 1955  
- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. interviewed by Martin Agronsky for Look Here, NBC, 1957
- Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. postage stamp, India Post, 1969
Farewell Statement for All India Radio, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., All India Radio, Prasar Bharti Archives, 1959, published online 2021
Martin Luther King – Untouchables in India and America, Los Angeles World Affairs Council & Town Hall, 1965, published online 2015 
Martin Luther King III commemorates his father's visit to India 50 years back, AP Archive, 2009, published online 2015
Racism against Africans in India, The Stream, Al Jazeera English, 2017
Subh-e-Azadi, Faiz Ahmed Faiz, 1947, audio published online by Brown Verses, 2022. Translation from Urdu to English adapted by the artist from Love and Revolution: Faiz Ahmed Faiz – The Authorised Biography, Ali Madeeh Hashmi, Rupa, 2016
We Cannot Stay Silent About George Floyd, Patriot Act Digital Exclusive, Netflix, 2020
- Was Mahatma Gandhi racist?, The Stream, Al Jazeera English, 2018 

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