The Success of the Birmingham Movement

529 Words2 Pages

In a letter written from the Birmingham City Jail in 1960, Martin Luther King Jr. made the proclamation that Birmingham, Alabama was, “Probably the most segregated city in the United States”. Martin Luther King’s, Why We Can’t Wait, initially provides the argument for why African Americans were ready to seek equality in a part of the country whose roots were planted deeply into segregation. King stated in his introduction that “The war had been won but not at just peace. Equality had never arrived. Equality was a hundred years late (xiii). The anniversary of the 1863 emancipation proclamation reminded blacks that their freedom was merely a legal term, and that they were not yet truly free. This was King’s argument that the negros’ place in society, while unprepared for change, desperately needed reform. Through the course of the Birmingham civil rights movement King would be jailed, denied bail and attempts would be made upon his life. Through all of this discouragement King would have remained sure that it was still a worthwhile success. “…I am in Birmingham because injustice is h...

Open Document