The Civil Rights Movement In The 1960s

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The Civil Rights movement in the 1960s is a struggle, majority in the South, by African Americans to achieve civil rights equal to those of the whites, including housing, education, and employment, as well the right to vote, have access to public facilities, and the right to be free of racial discrimination. The federal government generally stayed out of the civil rights struggle until 1964, when President Johnson pushed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 through congress prohibiting discrimination and promised equal opportunities in the workplace for all. The year after this happened the Voting Rights Act eliminated poll taxes and other restraints now allowing blacks to vote. These laws were not solving the problems African Americans were facing. …show more content…

Whites felt they had the right to make fun of and put down the blacks just because they were of a darker race. In the South many young black men and women that challenged the Jim Crow laws or the enforcers were willing to be jailed, beaten, harassed, and discriminated against to stand up for their rights. African Americans were discriminated for sitting at a white counter, going to the wrong labeled bathroom, going into stores, and even walking across a park to get to work. This new generation was willing to stand up, march, sing songs, give speeches, and take any racial discrimination in order to win this battle of racism. These men and women sang “”We’ll Never Turn Back,” “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Around, “ “Oh Freedom, “ “We Shall Overcome.””(Litwack, 2009) trying to expressing how they really felt in order to get people’s attention. Martin Luther King Jr. was also trying to get people’s attention from his Letter from Birmingham Jail, by answering all the criticisms from eight religious leaders of the South. He was in jail for not having a permit for participating in the nonviolent demonstrations against racial discrimination. He states “I am in Birmingham because injustice is here”(p. 1). Racial discrimination was prominent in Birmingham, a highly segregated city, during this time period. This city has faced unsolved crimes, such as bombings, brutal police attacks with …show more content…

African Americans faced an absence of justice on a daily basis. White supremacy has caused an unfairness towards the black lives, having no control or say over their own destiny. Malcolm X can stand by and relate to this life style having grown up and faced it all his life. Malcolm X (1963) states that the “position of wealth, power, and authority that these white Americans now hold…”(p. 2) is causing injustice between the two worlds. These white Americans have so much power and say over the blacks, because they have received all the help they need, which only led the blacks to become even more impoverished with no help. The white world had better education, the backing of the federal government, free of racial discrimination, and had more rights. The injustice of education caused blacks to lose their own right of receiving a good education. Once segregation was passed, they still faced the injustice of the school’s white students. The African Americans would either be harassed, tortured, ignored, or be sympathized by few white students. Going to school should not be this challenging and fearful for any student. Injustices need to be diminished from both worlds so that everyone has a fair chance to achieve the life they

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