Randal Maurice Jelks is a professor, a documentary producer, and the author of African Americans in the Furniture City and Benjamin Elijah Mays, Schoolmaster of the Movement. Jelks has most recently written Faith and Struggle in the Lives of Four African Americans: Ethel Waters, Mary Lou Williams, Eldridge Cleaver and Muhammad Ali. He was an executive producer of the documentary I, Too, Sing America: Langston Hughes Unfurled. Hecurrently teachesAmerican Studies, African Studies, and African American Studies at the University of Kansas.
"""You'll find hope in these pages. You'll find power and prayer. You'll find bittersweet beauty. You'll find a wise man and a hero in a conversation that offers the promise of a more just world. Letters to Martin is a compelling and thoroughly enlightening read."" -- Jonathan Eig, Ali: A Life ""Randal Maurice Jelks challenges us to think of 'democracy' not just as a set of procedural rules, but as deeper matters of our innermost being. Letters to Martin offers guidance, both personally and politically, on how we desire to live and how we accord inviolable respect to one another in this age of anti-democratic, disrespectful politics. Letters to Martin is filled with hopeful, intimate, and life-changing meditations on our times and our calling."" -- Serene Jones, President, Union Theological Seminary ""Dr. Randal Jelks's Letters to Martin is a profound meditation on democracy, spirituality, and history. A specialist in the history of the civil rights movement and the intellectual history of spirituality, Dr. Jelks engages the work of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in a deep and revealing examination of the meaning of democracy, ultimately centering it in the experiences of Black Americans. This is a lyrical book of hope and praise that is nonetheless unflinching in its honesty and compelling in its assessments."" -- Heather Cox Richardson, author of How the South Won the Civil War ""Randal Jelks's Letters to Martin is an informative, at times angry, and at times moving, even loving, collection of epistolary essays addressed to the political colossus of twentieth-century America, Martin Luther King Jr. Here is a biting, uncompromising rebuke of racist America that yet still expresses faith in our troubled nation and what it can be."" -- Gerald L Early, author of A Level Playing Field: African American Athletes and the Republic of Sports ""Offering a beautiful meditation on freedom of the self and self-governance as sacred realities, Jelks communes with Martin Luther King Jr., capturing in compelling detail how King's moral and political vision remains still vital as guides for the transformative work it falls to us to do."" -- Danielle S Allen, author of Our Declaration: A Reading of the Declaration of Independence in Defense of Equality ""Through Dr Jelks's deeply personal and beautifully written prose, we view King's legacy as part and parcel of the collective struggle and moral ingenuity of Black people, and in doing so, we are inspired and empowered to meet our current racial travails head on."" -- Melanye T Price, author of The Race Whisperer and Dreaming Blackness"