Rosa Parks Mother

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Rosa Parks: Mother of the Freedom Movement How would one feel if all their rights were taken and forced to put themselves in minority to the whites? What if you were not able to use a bathroom due to your race? Well, in the 1950’s the colored people were always put in second place, after the whites. One legendary woman named Rosa Parks changed this time period for the better and influenced everyone to take a stand. Parks and the Montgomery Bus Boycott is a major highlight in Civil Rights history because it provoked a Civil Rights Movement. She is a revolutionary person because of her valiant act of standing up for what she believed in and changed lives of many with the Civil Rights Movement, involvement in the blacks rights, and with the well-known …show more content…

In this paragraph, her early life will be described and the events that led up to the Montgomery Bus Boycott.In Rosa Louise Parks Biography, her background story is described and a lot about her family as well as her career and what happened after she made the decision of not giving up her seat. It interested me to know that Parks was an early activist and that she was involved in the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and was also involved in freeing the “Scottsboro Boys.” “At the time of her arrest, she was preparing for a major youth conference,” (“Rosa Louise Parks Biography”) this illustrates how determined Parks was for not only colored peoples rights but also equalizing genders. Ironically, Parks knew inequality her whole life due to her grandparents being slaves. She had to walk all the way to her one classroom school as all the white kids got bussed to school. She did not finish her education when she was young due to her mother’s illnesses, but when she married Raymond, she finished her studies and got her high school diploma at the age of twenty-one. Although Parks lacked education, she was always interested in receiving the rights her and her people …show more content…

Nixon, president of the Montgomery chapter”(An Act of Courage). Parks job was to meet with people and help them become registered voters. She had a great impact in this sense because very little colored people were able to vote. She helped the colored people once again with the act of not giving up her seat because she sparked a change in the Civil Rights Movement which at one point was very racist and unequal but was changed by Parks. Not only did she give the African-Americans hope, she also made sure her beliefs were heard. Of Course, Parks made sure this was conquered and eventually, “United States Supreme Court ruled that racial segregation on city buses was unconstitutional”(Rosa Parks Facts and Films). In other words, the separation between races, religions, colors etc. were prohibited in all schools, busses, and jobs. Thanks to Rosa Parks, everyone was finally able to have the same rights and opportunities. She encouraged the public to take a stand for what they believe in and never to settle for less. In a 1997 interview with Rosa Parks about her actions on that bus, Rosa Parks explains the reasoning behind her not giving her seat up to a white man, Parks shares her feelings towards the way black Americans were treated and how she felt about not having civil rights. Parks states how

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