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Analysis Of Letter From A Birmingham Jail

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Learning from “Letter from a Birmingham Jail by Dr. King” Dr. King wrote “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” when he was in jail for holding a desegregation protest in Birmingham, Alabama in April, 1963. As a leader of the civil-right movement, Dr. King found that it was an urgent need to take action in Birmingham where the worse segregation and racism brutality happened. However, Dr. King was criticized by eight clergymen that the protest was an extreme action. The letter was the response from Dr. King to their criticism. This essay will briefly summarizes what the letter was about, then discusses about the main arguments in the letter and why Dr. King’s fighting process was remarkably a great lesson to learn from. Even though being …show more content…

However, he hoped the clergymen and he could celebrate as brothers in God once the segregation is ended (Dr. King). Throughout the letter, Dr. King eloquently stated the philosophy behind the SCLC’s protest in return of the clergymen’s criticism. The first argument was he had both the authority and right motivation to come to Birmingham. This is the answer to the clergymen’s accusation that Dr. King was an “outsider”. Firstly, he was invited by his allies. Secondly, even if he was not invited, he still had to come to Birmingham since racial segregation was excruciating there. Not only were color people prohibited to enter the public parks, stay in motel, or to go to the white church, but also faced violence from bombing and police brutality. Innocent children could not be able to understand why they could not play at the park, or why they were treated badly. If this situation was acceptable in Birmingham, then it could have might spread to other places throughout the nation as well. Therefore, Dr. King had to take action to change the painful racism situation in Birmingham. The second argument was why a direct action was crucially needed and why nonviolent protest was not extreme as accused by the clergymen. Dr. King thoroughly explained the four steps process of a nonviolent campaign: to identify if the problem was there, to negotiate, to self-purify, and finally to take action. Obviously, racial segregation happed badly in

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