Letter From Birmingham Jail Summary

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“Letter from Birmingham Jail” is a letter Martin Luther King Jr wrote to eight, white clergymen who had written a letter that criticized the things both Dr. King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) did the Birmingham protests. Dr. King says that he wants the clergymen to respond to the pieces of criticism he was getting because he was unhappy about the criticisms. First, he responds to the claim the clergymen make about King being an “outsider” and he has only come to Birmingham to cause trouble. He talks about how he has the right to be there and explains that the SCLC is in Atlanta but is run throughout the South. A reason he came to Birmingham is that of one of the SCLC’s associates invited the group to Birmingham. …show more content…

King says that the black community has waited “more than 340 years” for equality, and he then he says that his people have been hurt both in the past and in his present day. Among these abuses, he now must tell his young daughter that she now isn’t allowed to go to the park because of the color of their skin. Dr. King then talks about how the white moderates have disappointed him. He says that they believe in “order” over “justice,” which causes them to have made it less difficult for the inequality of racism to continue. He is certain that moderates are not able to differentiate between the peaceful action and the violence of the enemies. He is surprised that the clergymen blamed the black victims for the violence of racism, as he thinks they did in their open letter. He then talks about a second disappointment in the white church. Even though he once thought that the Southern church to be one of the primary allies of his movement, they have opposed his cause of staying “silent”, leading to enabling inequality. A lot of the leaders of the white church saw the Civil Rights as a social movement, and unrelated to their church. However, Dr. King thinks the only way the church will stay relevant is if they make

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