Martin Luther King
At the time Dr. King wrote "Letter from Birmingham City Jail," blacks were going through tremendous struggles in life. Blacks were shunned from one side of the nation to the other. Dr. King had been arrested at the time and was locked up in a Birmingham City Jail. Birmingham was known for its racial discrepancies, and for its police brutality record. In King's letter he appeals to many emotions as pathos, ethos, and logos to appeal to his audience. King starts his letter by saying "While confined here in the Birmingham city jail." (King, 2,842) This is important because King is making a strong point right away in his letter. He is saying that they threw him in jail for what he believed in and he was okay with that because he was standing for what he believed in. Birmingham in 1963 was toxic with racism and segregationist to the core. Not long before, in the wake of the Montgomery bus boycott and the desegregation of Little Rock's schools, 17 of its black churches had been bombed. Indeed, there had been more unsolved bombings of black homes and churches in Birmingham than in any other city in the United States. King does a great job bringing his audience to reality when he talks about h
After reading the letter and understanding the role that the 50's and 60's had on black people, I can understand and relate to Dr. This was the first step in a long struggle to racial equality. ow he has been labeled as an "outsider coming in" by the Clergyman. After many years of fighting and discrimination King finally won what he was after "equality. King was basically arguing the need for racial equality. In his letter he speaks of this, "Anyone who lives in the U. From riding a bus, to using the bathroom at a restaurant, to drinking out of a water fountain at lunch these people were segregated. This direct action was a nonviolent approach to get their words to be heard. can never be considered an outsider anywhere in this country. In the letter King explained the nature of a nonviolent protest, stating that an initial determination of whether injustice truly existed was made and that negotiations with community leaders took place to resolve the issue. They were told when and where they could go, being segregated in all aspects of life. King had a strong belief that people should never be oppressed for far too long.
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