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Causes Of The Birmingham Bombing

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One of the most remarkable events during the Civil Rights Movement was the Birmingham Church Bombing. This event took place on an early Sunday morning in 1963, just before the early service started at the Sixteenth Street Baptist church in Birmingham, Alabama. Nineteen sticks of dynamite had been placed beneath the church steps in the basement below; as a result, four young African American girls were tragically killed and others were severely injured (Dabkowski 1). The malevolent “Klu Klux Klan” was to blame for this horrific event. It was an act of pure evil and racism against African Americans. This tragedy left many African Americans heartbroken and angry with the US government. Between the mourning for the young lives lost and the frustration that the African Americans felt as second-class citizens, this event left a devastating mark in the Civil Rights Movement. On the morning of September 15, 1963, the devastating event known as the Birmingham Bombing took place. Eleven-year-old Sarah Collins and her fourteen-year-old sister, Addie Mae Collins had decided to hide out in the ladies’ room, which was in the church’s basement (Dabkowski 1). Shortly after, three other young girls joined them around 10:15 in the morning. Cynthia Wesley, Carol Denise McNair, and Carole Robertson had no idea what they were in for by joining the two sisters, instead of staying in Sunday school. After a few minutes of playing, as Addie Mae Collins reached out to tie a sash on McNair’s dress,

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