How Did Orval E Faubus Speech On School Integration Influence The Civil Rights Movement?

577 Words2 Pages

The Civil Rights Movement, the fight for racial equality, first began when Soviet diplomats used racial segregation and discrimination in America against blacks as an anti-American propaganda tool to express defects in America’s society. (pg. 1052) President Eisenhower began to address multiple racial concerns by eliminating racial discrimination in military bases and desegregating multiple public facilities such as libraries, restaurants, playgrounds, and parks. (pg. 1052-1053) Of course, those who came from the races that were being discriminated against were the most significant leadership figures. (pg. 1053) Fearless African Americans would resist against discrimination and segregation in a variety of places, fighting for the basic human …show more content…

Board of Education case overtook racial segregation in the South due to the ruling that “in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place.” (pg. 1054) The justices found that certain “feelings of inferiority among black children” were sourced from racial segregation in schools, directing America to move towards racial integration. (pg. 1054) Orval E. Faubus’ “Speech on School Integration” discussed the new concept of racial integration in schools across the United States. (Speech on School Integration) Previous ideas of racial discrimination were further challenged by the Little Rock Nine and the Montgomery Bus Boycott. (pg. 1055) In Montgomery, Alabama, a 42-year-old black activist for racial justice named Rosa Parks declined the demand to give up her bus seat to a white man. (pg. 1055) In a sense, she instigated the “modern civil rights movement” with her courageous actions that despite leading to her arrest, instigated various protests and urged support for the “Montgomery bus boycott.” (pg. 1055-1056) The primary source on the speech of Martin Luther King, an influential African American leader, on the issue of the Montgomery bus boycott describes the passion blacks felt towards resisting against white oppression. (The Montgomery Bus

Open Document