Martin Luther King Jr.: The End of a Dream
Rev Michael King together with his partner, Alberta, gave their firstborn son the name Michael. He later changed his name and his son's to Martin Luther. This was to honor the great 16th century reformer[footnoteRef:1]. Just like his namesake, he, Martin Luther, Sr., dedicated his lifetime to rectifying wrongs. As a preacher of Ebenezer Baptist, the Rev pressed the church members to fight Jim Crow rulings - local rulings. These laws denied fair treatment to the African-Americans. The rulings violated human rights guaranteed to every U.S. citizen under the U.S. Constitution[footnoteRef:2]. Rev Luther did not just preach about human rights. He demonstrated his words with action. In January of the year 1935[footnoteRef:3], he organized a demonstration against the separation of elevators in the local district courthouse. After eight months, the Rev ran an initiative to register the African-Americans as electorates. In 1939, Luther and several followers marched to the city hall of Atlanta to show the African-Americans' political strength[footnoteRef:4]. He believed the people could utilize their votes in altering the lawmakers and the laws. Martin Luther, Sr., was setting up a platform for a nationwide human rights movement. [1: John A. Kirk, "Martin Luther King, Jr." Journal of American Studies 38, no. 02 (2004): 329] [2: Claybornecarson, The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. Grand Central Publishing, 2001.] [3: Marshall Frady, Martin Luther King, Jr. : A Life. New York: Penguin Books, 2002.] [4: Ibid.]
Joining the Struggle
Soon Dr. Martin was at the middle of Montgomery's human rights fight. He operated with other organizations, which comprised the NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), and the WPC (Women's Political Council). On First December 1955, Rosa Parks, who was the secretary for Montgomery NAACP, got arrested for declining to change seat to the back seat of a bus[footnoteRef:5]. The WPC of Montgomery responded by calling on all Black Americans to demonstrate, or discontinue using the buses. On December 5th, the leader of the WPC and other African-American heads in the city, created the MIA (Montgomery Improvement Association) to start up the boycott[footnoteRef:6]. Martin King, Jr. was elected the president. The city's mayor declined to talk with Dr. Luther except if the MIA ended the boycott. They disobeyed the mayor's demands and continued with the boycott until further notice. [5: Supra, note 2] [6: Ibid.]
Before the end of the boycott, Dr. King's house was bombed, the individual was tried and sentenced on boycott-connected charges. The Alabama state then banned the NAACP. These indignations only resulted in other parts of the nation being sympathetic to Dr. Luther's cause. On 13th November, 1956, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the bus segregation law in Montgomery to be unconstitutional[footnoteRef:7]. The following day, members of MIA voted to discontinue the boycott. Once the Montgomery city bus lines recommenced service, Martin Luther, Jr., was one of the first commuters on the newly integrated...
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