Pilgrimage To Freedom: The African American Civil Rights Movement

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The Race to Freedom: Effective Tactics of the African American Civil Rights Movement
From the Autobiography of Martin Luther King Junior, “Pilgrimage to Nonviolence,” it said “The way of violence leads to bitterness in the survivors and brutality in the destroyers. But the way of nonviolence leads to redemption and the creation of the beloved community.” (Sequeira). The African American Civil Rights Movement was an ongoing fight for personal rights, protections, and privileges of all races, especially African Americans, the largest minority group in the United States. It was a stand against the segregation laws that disallowed African American citizens their basic rights such as their citizenship, and right to vote. This pivotal movement …show more content…

It lasted from 1954-68, and it occurred in the United States, but mainly the South where blacks were being treated unfairly because of the Jim Crow laws. This movement surfaced after the 14th and 15th Amendments were enforced. These Amendment allowed former slaves to become citizens, and prohibited states from denying people the right to vote. These Amendments were not followed, so from 1955-1968, acts of nonviolent protests emerged in the African American community to immediately respond to the inequalities faced by blacks. The most effective methods used to protest for their civil rights included bus boycotts, sit ins, and marches. Violent methods were used as well to bring about force and attention to the inequalities. Although violent protests aroused immediate attention, nonviolent tactics such as protests, boycotts, marches, sit ins, civil disobedience, and legislation were most effective in the African American Civil Rights Movement because they attracted diverse groups of …show more content…

The NAACP was created to oppose racism, and work for the abolition of segregation and discrimination in housing, education, employment, voting, and transportation. With their involvement in national issues, this organization advocated for nonviolence, especially with their court cases, and involvement in legislation fighting for equality and desegregation. For example, in 1954, the Supreme Court declared that the segregation of public schools and facilities was unconstitutional in the case of Brown vs. Board of Education of Topeka. They discovered this with the help of the NAACP. In 1955, the Court ordered the desegregation of public schools, though it did not set a deadline for this process. Three years after Brown, nearly all southern schools remained segregated. But this didn’t stop the NAACP to fight even more through legislation, instead they decided to push the federal government to enforce the 1955 Supreme Court order to desegregate public schools. To do this they decided to focus on the all-white high school in Little Rock, Arkansas. So, in September 1957, nine black teenagers enrolled in Central High School. Angry mobs, encouraged by the Arkansas governor Orval Faubus defiance of the federal government, surrounded and threatened the students. Ultimately, President Dwight Eisenhower reluctantly ordered

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