Standing up for others rights is important because when you stand up to it you are standing up to injustice and unfairness. When you do stand up to injustice you must have the courageousness and bravery to stand up for what you believe is not right. Someone who stood up to unfairness was Rosa Parks. Rosa Parks did not give up her seat on a public bus. She thought it to be unjust that people would judge others by their skin color. But if you cut a white person and a black person they would both bleed. Parks went to jail for refusing to yield her seat on a Montgomery bus. Parks was in jail for 24 hours before she was bailed out by Edgar Nixon and Clifford Durr. Parks was a strong and brave woman. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr was a
“You must never be fearful about what you are doing when it is right.” This was said by Rosa Parks. She was an enormous inspiration to the African American Race. She was one among many who lived in a rough time for African Americans. She lived in a time when equality wasn’t really equal. When African Americans were scared/ weren’t allowed to state their opinions on different matters. However, Rosa Parks was an individual who stood up for herself. Rosa Parks helped the Civil Rights Movement and African Americans gain equality mainly through her courage and refusal to move.
Cesar Chavez and Mahatma Gandhi both gave rights to people with very little rights. Cesar Chavez gave more rights to migrant farm workers and Mahatma Gandhi helped uninslave India from Britain. Both where historic defenders of human rights. It is essential to defend human rights because everyone is equal no matter what race or culture and no matter if you are rich or poor. People should all be given the same opportunities to be able to do anything they want to accomplish.
Rosa Parks wouldn’t give up her seat on the bus for she thought that blacks and whites should be equal not separate and share the same bus seat.
Standing Up for What is Right Learning about civil rights was a requirement for many of us during our years in school. We have learned about the leaders and how they have been treated at civil rights movements, we know that because of them the world is how it is today. Although individuals have been taught these things not many was educated about civil rights from a leader’s perspective. A famous leader we all should know about, from his “I have a Dream” speech down to his birthplace; Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Parks was committed to disintegrating racial inequality in everyday situations, for example Jobs, Schools, Public services, The criminal justice system, etc. Park’s contributions to the Civil Rights movement have lasted a lifetime. The work put in, by Parks to the civil rights movements is more than the effort of a single
Rosa Parks' refusal to relinquish her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama bus was a slap in the face to hard line Jim Crow Southerners who thought that blacks are inferior to whites; it also happened to be illegal, and Parks was swiftly and promptly arrested for breaking a Jim Crow law. Little did the police arresting her know that this arrest would lead to the downfall of the very law they felt they needed, and wanted, to enforce. Along with MLK's protests and marches, a Federal Court determined segregation on buses to be unconstitutional. That would not have happened had it not been for Parks' refusal to obey a law that was both ludicrous and morally wrong. Every human on this earth, regardless of skin color or ethnicity, is exactly that: human, and therefore they deserve
One cold December day a woman got onto a bus after a long shift at work, exhausted from the day she plopped down in a seat near the front. The next stop many white people boarded and the bus started to get full so they moved back until they reached the woman's seat. This was a problem because this woman, Rosa Parks, was black and had to move or she would end up in jail. Even with that knowledge, she refused to give that seat up. Many blacks faced this problem every day during the Civil Rights Movement, but weren't brave enough to stand up for their rights like Rosa was. After Rosa said "no" many realized they could stand up for their rights as well. Parks helped with people's involvement during these tough times and was involved herself. Due
Gandhi, Chief Joseph, Susan B. Anthony, Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King Jr all made a change in history, which was making everyone equal no matter if people black, white, male, or female we are all equal inside. It is important for people to take a stand on issues of justice in society because you are changing something from unjust to just, stand up for people who cannot stand up for themselves, and to stand up for people so everyone can be equal. Changing something from unjust to just. During the time of Susan B. Anthony she said “we, the people not we the white male citizen; nor yet we, the male citizens, but we, the whole people, who formed the union.” She means she wants everyone to be equal.
Throughout the course of humanity, people’s opinions and beliefs have drifted the course of society throughout the ages. Our founding fathers embrace this idea when birthing a new nation. Standing up for what you believe is important because you can influence the populace, prevent opposition taking the upper hand, and provide improvements.
An individual can only grow as its barrier permits. Captivity limits a person's ability to perform. Furthermore, the punishments that arise with this causes fear in an individual's everyday life. In 1896, the Supreme Court ruled the separation of black and white races. This segregation was in codification until 1954, the same year it was overruled. During this time Martin Luther King Jr., leader during the Civil Rights Movement and an integrationist, lead nonviolent protests to end discrimination and to have equal rights. Equally important to the movement that was the actions of Rosa Parks. Both individuals faced similar discrimination and felt caged by the barriers built by society. When they tried to break through these barriers they faced conflicts that they thought to be worth the effort to strive closer towards freedom. Rosa Parks and Dr. King were both jailed for their attempts for justice, during the time in which King wrote the “Letter from Birmingham Jail” to the eight clergymen who he thought did bear genuine good will and had a little in common with his efforts.
There are many people who have made choices that have either changed history or fought for the rights they deserved. For example, Rosa Parks is someone who stood up for her herself in 1955, when many laws weren’t fair for blacks. She knew there may be consequences for her actions, but knew that standing up for herself was something she had to do. Rosa Parks also had the courage and strength to do something so brave and risky that would cause her to go to jail. While on the bus, she spoke up for herself and that alone, changed history. She changed the rights for black people and public transportation and is remembered as a courageous person for doing so. Rosa Parks didn’t give up her seat because she wanted to, she did it because she was tired of giving in. Doing what she did, in my opinion changed life for the blacks for the better.
One day, Mrs. Parks was riding the bus and sat in the front, which was reserved for white people only, instead of sitting in the back where colored people were assigned to sit. Mrs. Parks was told to sit in the back of the bus but she refused to move. The police then came and arrested her. Parks collaborated with other groups and organizations to work towards civilization. She was seen as a historical figure when people saw her as an icon of resistance to racial segregation.
During the Civil Rights movement, One event by a woman named Rosa Parks who was a great leader and was known for sparking the birth of Civil Rights across the United States with believing in equality of all people. Rosa Parks died on October 25, 2005 at age 92. Rosa parks felt that everyone should be free and everyone should have equal rights and opportunity. Rosa Parks was very brilliant and was able to get education, She was born in 1913. Rosa Parks was a woman who accomplished greatly for going through and planning out the Bus Boycott of 1955. This would have the African American plant a seed on the ground and stood up for what is right for many years that followed. That all people of different color deserve the right as equals.
On December 1, 1955, in Montgomery, Alabama, Parks refused to obey bus driver James F. Blake's order that she give up her seat in the colored section to a white passenger, after the white section was filled. Parks was not the first person to resist bus segregation. Others had taken similar steps in the twentieth century, including Irene Morgan in 1946, Sarah Louise Keys in 1955, and the members of the Browder v. Gayle lawsuit (Claudette Colvin, Aurelia Browder, Susie McDonald, and Mary Louise Smith) arrested months before Parks. NAACP organizers believed that Parks was the best candidate for seeing through a court challenge after her arrest for civil disobedience in violating Alabama segregation laws
Rosa Parks is an amazing example of standing up for the cause. She knew she was supposed to hand over her seat to a white man. She knew that the aftermath of such an act at that time was punishable by jail time. And she did it anyway, for the dream of equal rights to all, no matter the race, color,