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Martin Luther King Jr.: The Civil Rights Movement

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The Civil Rights Movement had several pros however there are cons to every situation. The suffering of people were cured by the medicine of the great personality that still stand as the role model of the world, Martin Luther King Jr. He cured the people with the speeches they delivered and the letters they wrote. The letters and speeches delivered during this movement had been very inspirational in which it made more people want to become a part of this immense movement. Martin Luther King Jr. was very inspirational but had different ways to handle things than other civil rights movement leaders. MLK Jr. was a very big contributor to the Civil Rights Movement but he said everything through “The Letter from Birmingham”. The Civil rights Movement …show more content…

Civil rights demonstrators were punished for certain acts especially when the movement had commenced. The one reason for the success of the Civil Rights Movement was the presence of the television cameras that captured the readiness of police to ignore the indulge in criminal behavior in order to suppress peaceful civil rights demonstrators (Janken). The interweaving of civil rights strategy and the Christian religious thought attracted the support of thousands of churches, white as well as black and many Jews accepted the leadership that they go limp and respond nonviolently even when beaten (Lehrman). Martin Luther King Jr. was born born on Tuesday, January 15, 1929 in Atlanta, Georgia into a religious family (About Dr. King). Even if he was from a religious family he intended to pursue a career in law or medicine. He was graduated from Booker T. Washington High School at the age of only fifteen. He graduated at a very young age from high school because he had been really intelligent in which he skipped the first and his last year of high school. (Dr Martin Luther). According to an

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