Some of the most memorable remarks made Monday at the annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day breakfast in downtown Minneapolis came from the civil rights icon himself.
Rarely seen footage of King addressing a crowd of mostly white students at the University of Minnesota in 1967 was projected behind the stage at the Minneapolis Armory. He was speaking on race, poverty and the Vietnam War nearly a year before his assassination in April 1968.
"I personally decided to tell America the truth, because I love America so much," King told the U students near the end of his speech. "And I want to see our great nation stand as a moral example of the world."
Speakers in Minneapolis, and later in the morning at a celebration of King's birthday organized by Gov. Mark Dayton's office in St. Paul, echoed his message of honesty, unity and hope for racial progress and equality.
They included David Oyelowo, a British-born actor who played King to critical acclaim in the 2014 film "Selma." Oyelowo, the keynote speaker for the Minneapolis event, said he worried that King had been reduced "to a figure, untouchable, carved in stone, a monument" and that people today have forgotten "how human he was."
Oyelowo said that when it comes to race, the United States is "in a place we do not want to be," and he urged listeners to reach out to people of differing beliefs as King did.
"He knew … this country was in a place it shouldn't be," Oyelowo said. "He needed to be strong, and he could only do that from a place of knowing who he was."
A record crowd of more than 2,300 people, including Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter and U.S. Sens. Amy Klobuchar and Tina Smith attended the breakfast at the newly renovated Armory.