Why Is The Montgomery Bus Boycott Important

1147 Words3 Pages

Kallie Gardner
Mrs. Keithley
ELA5th
November, 9th 2015
Montgomery Bus Boycott
“I've been engaged in a non-violent protest against indignities and injustices experienced on city buses. We have felt all along that we have just caused and legal excused for such action. We have simply decided to say in mass that we were tired of being trampled over with our own feet of oppression. All along we have sought to carry out the protest on high moral standards. Our methods and techniques have been rooted in the deep sorrows of the Christian faith. We have carefully avoided bitterness.”
(Martin Luther King Jr.; bus boycott speech 1955,(youtube.com) Martin Luther King Jr. is important because, he and Rosa Parks started the Montgomery Bus Boycott which …show more content…

King then declared that all men who believed this law should and would be revoked should all stay off the busses leaving them to use any other transportation such as walking, running, biking and even carpooling. Martin stood by their side every step of the way. King,being a man in high respect to the negroes, received many death threats from the whites who hated him and the protest that he had started. Yet he was for sure not afraid. He yet, ignored the rude words of others. His attitude was strong and he realized that with every action comes a consequence. He accepted that because he knew what he was fighting for, what he believed in, and for he knew, all men were created equal in his eyes.(youtube.com)The black men and women of montgomery did as Martin Luther said to. Children walked along the crowded sidewalks to schoolards. Pastors and men carpooled to church. Women and daughters biked to the market. They even ran to get home. No one was upset they had to. They were happy they were doing something about bus segregation. They were proud. All of this mess started from a few people to become a massive protest including all of montgomery's negroes. It's amazing what one voice can do. to start out small, and then raise such commotion. Dr.king has inspired many to pursue their dreams and always accept those who are different. King’s Stride Toward Freedom is his memoir of the Montgomery bus boycott. (kingencyclopedia.stanford.edu) On November 15th 1956 The U.S Supreme Court ruled out that bus segregation laws were unconstitutional and the law was abolished. This has changed the way the whole world looks at others and how we have come so far. Then on November 21, 1956 Montgomery City Bus Lines re-opened with full bus services to all races weither black or white and this time it was fair. This just puts a smile on anyone's face who got to be apart of the bus

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