Monday, August 13, 2012

Martin LuA PREACHER’S SON

Martin LuA PREACHER’S SON


King was born in Atlanta, Georgia, in January 1929. His father and grandfather were preachers at the large all-black Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta. King himself became a preacher at age 18.
While attending graduate school in Boston, he met Coretta Scott. The couple married in 1953. The following year King’s first job as a minister took him to Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama.
CIVIL RIGHTS
In the 1950s, black people were not treated very well in the United States. Public places, including schools and restrooms, were segregated in many Southern states. That means that there were separate buildings or areas for black people and for white people. Even in Northern states, black people often weren’t allowed to live in nicer neighborhoods. They were rarely hired for good jobs. Their children could not go to good schools. In some places they even had to give up their seats on buses if a white person wanted to sit down.
In 1955, police in Montgomery arrested a black woman named Rosa Parks for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white man. Black people in the city started a boycott of the bus system. They refused to use it as long as it did not treat them equally. The boycott’s leaders chose King as their spokesman.
For nearly a year Montgomery’s black residents refused to ride the city’s buses. They walked and rode in car pools. They took their case to court.
The Supreme Court of the United States ruled in favor of the protestors. The nation’s highest court said segregation on public buses was illegal not only in Montgomery, but everywhere in the nation. That ruling was a great victory for civil rights.
A NATIONAL LEADER
King was an excellent speaker. “We have gained a new sense of dignity and destiny,” he said after the Montgomery victory. “We have discovered a new and powerful weapon—nonviolent resistance.” King’s speeches appealed to both Christian principles and American ideals. Time magazine and other magazines and newspapers featured the handsome young preacher on their covers.
King was one of the leaders of a protest in Birmingham, Alabama, that attracted worldwide attention. Policemen attacked peaceful marchers, including schoolchildren carrying small American flags.
The Birmingham police arrested King. In jail he wrote a letter to local ministers who had criticized him for disrupting the city. King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” expressed his belief that individuals had the moral right and responsibility to disobey unjust laws. The letter enhanced King’s reputation as a moral leader.
KING’S MOST FAMOUS SPEECH
On August 28, 1963, the March on Washington took place. More than 200,000 people gathered to hear King give his “I Have a Dream” speech from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.
The protests in Birmingham and in Washington helped convince the U.S. Congress to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This act made it illegal in America to treat blacks or other ethnic groups unfairly.
That same year King’s peaceful efforts to win civil rights earned him the Nobel Peace Prize.
ASSASSINATION
King’s opinions and success in winning civil rights angered many people. In the spring of 1968, he traveled to Memphis, Tennessee, to support the city’s black garbage workers. The workers refused to collect the garbage until the city gave them better working conditions. While there, King was shot and killed by James Earl Ray, a white man who had escaped from jail.
King is remembered for the great changes he made to American society and for the peaceful means that he used to make them. The third Monday of every January is a national holiday that honors King’s birthday

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