Martin Luther King Jr.: Shaping The American Dream

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Jordan Ishida English period 4 Ms. Garcia 2015 April 29 Shaping the American Dream Martin Luther King Jr., a world class American Civil Rights activist led with outstanding principles to succeed in the equality of African Americans. King's exceeding labor reformed American history for the greater good by allowing everyone the opportunity to live the American Dream. Not only did he fight for the equality of African Americans but he lead America to a place where everyone could live with one another in harmony. Without his altruistic sacrifice and dedication, no one would be able to live freely with the opportunity we have today. By definition the American Dream is a list of principles which includes success and prosperity achieved through hard …show more content…

Rosa was later took into custody for not following the city's segregation laws. That's when the small group of activists created the Montgomery Improvement Association which picked King as their leader. King successfully ran this program which led him to organize the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. This allowed him to speak on a more national platform about nonviolence protesting and racial issues. In 1960 King took his family and moved back to his home city Atlanta where he and the SCLC protested by sit ins. Many of the people who protested were young African American college students. Toward the ending part of October he and 33 others were taken in to custody for protesting at a lunch counter. Charges were discontinued but King was sent to Reidsville State Prison Farm on account of breaching probation on a minor traffic violation. This cause a national outrage with concern for his safety and president Eisenhower's inability to intervene. King was then released upon John F. Kennedy who later won the election 8 days …show more content…

One of his most famous ones was the "I have a Dream" speech. It was given on August 28, 1963 in Washington D.C. at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the March of Washington. The speech was written to end racism in the United States. It explained how he wanted people to know that all people are made equal, not just whites or blacks but all people. King says, "I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal" (King). He delivered this speech with such devotion and charismatic purpose that all rose in favor that all men created equal. From that point on he changed the social understandings for all and upcoming

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