Letter From Birmingham Jail Analysis

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Martin Luther King Jr. had a dream that Negroes would be equal and have civil rights. In his book King take us on his journey of what he endured as he was fighting for their rights as colored people. In the introduction that Ms. Dorothy Cotton wrote who was an Education Director for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) and she also worked closely with Dr. King. Ms. Cotton explains being there with Martin when he decides to proceed with his protest that would land him in jail. In her introduction she states that “Martin's decision to go to jail was a turning point for the civil rights struggle” (xi). While being imprisoned King “wrote his most profound explanation of [the people's] nonviolent strategy” (xii) to get justice for colored people. …show more content…

King explains the importance of nonviolence and how it “heals the oppressed as well as the oppressor” (xii). “It had been Bull Connor's Birmingham but with [MLKJ], Fred Shuttlesworth, and [many] other [devoted] people working [as one] there emerged “A New Day in Birmingham.”(xii). King also used “another tool” which was “the importance of freedom songs” (xii). King “showed how and why [freedom] songs were the soul of the movement [by] explaining that they are more than “incantation of phrases, but also adaptations of the songs the slaves sung”(xiii). One freedom song has the lyrics “we would not let anything turn us around”(x). Martin Luther King Jr and a church full of people marched for “freedom, their rights to vote, equal jobs, and public schools with no

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