Disagreement of Blacks on Methods to Achieve Civil Rights

701 Words2 Pages

The beginning of the civil rights movement began in Montgomery,

Alabama in 1955 when a black woman Rosa Parks (NAACP) refused to give

up her seat on a bus to a white man and got arrested for it. People

started to hear this; this is when Martin Luther King decided that

civil right could be won through peaceful protest. During the 1960s

there were many attitudes to achieve civil rights for African

Americans. But not everyone had the same beliefs. There were groups

like National Association for the Advancement of coloured people

(NAACP), Deacons, The Nation of Islam, student non-violent

co-ordinating committee SNCC, Congress of racial equality (CORE) and

the Black Panther party. Boycotts, sit-ins, speeches and marches were

used to protest.

Rather than cope with civil disobedience and the strife it generated,

Kennedy decided to introduce a civil rights bill to congress. He

wanted the nation to back his actions. But he was not prepared to

force the measure through and possibly lose the support of congress.

When martin Luther King planned a march through Washington in support

for the bill, Kennedy asked him to call it off. King refused and

200,000 people marched. Things changed after Kennedy’s assassination

in 1963. There was a great wave of sympathy for him ands for his aims.

An important Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964.

Robert F William’s NAACP chapter in Monroe, NC, his approach for

African American civil rights and justice was to use violence if

necessary e.g. to defend your self if violently opposed. Robert F

Williams’s activities were to educate people and the president of his

union county branch of NAACP recruited me...

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...o follow the police and become for violent

and sometimes have gun fights. Also they wanted to start a race war

against the whites. The non white members had guns for self defence.

They wore black militant uniforms and observed police movement. There

leaders were Huey Newton and Bobby Seale they both built up the

community. They didn’t advance on the movement against the non-violent

civil rights movement and believed black superiors.

Having different approaches to have the same outcome caused a lot of

pressure for all the groups. Some groups thought there way was the

best way. There were many arguments about which way were the best way,

and some groups thought that other groups work might wreck our work.

Because not all the groups got along, they restricted the amount of

work they could have done towards civil rights.

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