You Can't kill hope
A Fire You Can't Put Out, by Andrew Manis, is a very detailed biography of Fred Shuttlesworth. The book highlights many events that took place during the Civil Rights movement and Shuttlesworth's fight against segregation. The most significant issue presented, in my opinion, is Shuttlesworth's strong-willed personality, which drove him to fight for a cause that he was willing to die for. Fred, raised in a family as the oldest child, learned at an early age that he had to be strong like his mother Alberta. The situations and people who surrounded him shaped Fred's personality. In his early adult life he converted to the Baptist denomination and realized his true dream was to become a preacher. His strong religious beliefs and combative personality made him a very successful minister. Fred would fight to integrate Birmingham's buses, schools, lunch counters, police force, and parks. During his adulthood, he battled segregation and would nearly be killed three times. The evidence that Fred would grow up to be a man with a combative personality with an authoritarian style was illustrated in his early years. Being the oldest child in a family of nine children, Fred had many responsibilities. The Shuttlesworth fa
Fred showed a firm position and that he was not willing to compromise. Fred encouraged the members of his church to become registered voters and was willing to accompany them to register. This was another example of his combative personality. Fred's personality was the most significant issue raised by the book for the simple fact that he was willing to fight and die for everything he believed. I really enjoyed reading A Fire You Can't Put Out. In the years to come Fred continued his fight to integrate buses, schools and the police force. Fred built a positive view of the ministry and conceived that one day he would become a minister. As a reader, I was let in on everything that developed his personality as a whole. He began his movement with a fight for voting rights. His organization, the Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights, joined forces with Martin Luther King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in 1963. The next few years were very prosperous for the ACMHR. Fred was willing to fight for what he believed in and was not going to let anyone change his mind. He showed an unwillingness to back down in everything he did. Shuttlesworth converted to the Baptist denomination after receiving an invitation from a friend to attend a Baptist service. Integrating public buses was Fred's next action.
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