Walk with me down memory lane. The time: 1968. In 30 months, one 
			million dead. The setting: a dusty camp in Biafra where survivors 
			waited and hoped for peace. The survivors: Refugees fleeing from the 
			“Dance of Death.” My mentor: One of the refugee camp directors, whom 
			I called “Teacher” out of respect. 
			 
			“Martin Luther King has been killed,” Teacher said, with a pained 
			voice and vacant eyes. I looked towards Teacher, wondering: “Who is 
			Martin Luther King?” I was a 13-year-old refugee in the west African 
			nation of Nigeria, a land then called Biafra. Martin Luther King. 
			What did that name mean?
			 
			Eight out of ten Biafrans were refugees exiled from their own 
			country. Two years earlier, Christian army officers had staged a 
			bloody coup killing Muslim leaders. The Muslims felt the coup was a 
			tribal mutiny of Christian Igbos against their beloved leaders. The 
			aggrieved Muslims went on a killing rampage, chanting: “Igbo, Igbo, 
			Igbo, you are no longer part of Nigeria!” In the days that followed, 
			50,000 Igbos were killed in street uprisings.
			 
			Killing was not new to us in Biafra. I was 13, but I knew much of 
			killing. Widows and orphans were most of the refugees in our camp. 
			They had survived the Igbo “Dance of Death” – a euphemism for the 
			mass executions. One thousand men at gunpoint forced to dance a 
			public dance. Seven hundred were then shot and buried en masse in 
			shallow graves. When told to hurry up and return to his regular 
			duty, one of the murderers said: “The graves are not yet full.”
			 
			A few days later, with only the clothes on our backs, we fled from 
			this “Dance of Death.” That was six months before Martin Luther King 
			Jr. was assassinated. Teacher and I were eventually conscripted into 
			the Biafran army and sent to the front, two years after our escape.
			
			 
			After the war, Teacher – who had taught me the name of Martin Luther 
			King – was among the one million who had died. I – a child soldier – 
			was one of the fifteen million who survived.
			 
			Africa is committing suicide: a two-decade war in Sudan, genocidal 
			killings in Rwanda, scorched-earth conflicts in Ethiopia, Somalia, 
			Uganda, and Liberia. The wars in modern Africa are the largest 
			global-scale loss of life since the establishment of the Atlantic 
			Slave trade, which uprooted and scattered Africa’s sons and 
			daughters across the United States, Jamaica, and Brazil. 
			 
			Africa’s wars are steering the continent toward a sea of 
			self-destruction so deep that even the greatest horror writers are 
			unable to fathom its depths. So, given our circumstances, Martin 
			Luther King was a name unknown, a dead man among millions, with a 
			message that never reached the shores of Biafra. 
			 
			Neither did his message reach the ears of “The Black Scorpion,” 
			Benjamin Adekunle, a tough Nigerian army commander, whose credo of 
			ethnic cleansing knew nothing of Martin Luther King Jr.’s movement: 
			“We shoot at everything that moves, and when our forces move into 
			Igbo territory, we even shoot things that do not move.”
			 
			As we heed Martin Luther King Jr.’s call, and march together across 
			the world stage, let us never forget that we who have witnessed and 
			survived the injustice of such nonsensical wars are the torchbearers 
			of his legacy of peace for our world, our nation, and our children.
			
			 
			Excerpted from a speech delivered by
			Philip Emeagwali at 
			Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia at the commemoration of the 
			40th anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination. The 
			entire transcript and video is posted at
			emeagwali.com.
			 
			Philip Emeagwali has been 
			called “a father of the Internet” by
			
			CNN  and
			
			TIME, and extolled as “one of the great minds of the Information 
			Age” by former U.S. president
			
			Bill Clinton. 
			  
			e:info@emeagwali.com | w:
			emeagwali.com