Martin, born January 15, 1929 in Atlanta, spent his early childhood on the streets of Sweet Auburn, a neighborhood that was home to some of the most affluent and prosperous African-Americans then. His mother, Alberta Williams King, was the daughter of Rev. A. D. Williams, who was among the most prominent black ministers of his time, and his father, Martin Luther King Sr., was a devout Christian minister of the local church, Ebenezer, who won great respects among both blacks and whites. This comfortable upbringing that the Kings provided for their children could not, however, provide a sense of security for them from the horrors of the racially segregated days of “Jim …show more content…
In wakes of the incident, E.D. Nixon and the local National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) chapter organized the Montgomery Improvement Association (MIA) to lead a boycott against the city’s transit system. King was elected president of this newfound organization, and although he was only twenty-six at the time, he already proved himself to be an excellent and promising leader for his young age. In addition, he was admired not only for his philosophy, incisive thinking, and articulacy, but for employing the ideologies of the Christian social gospel, along with Mahatma Gandhi’s theories of nonviolent resistance, which he believed to be the “most potent weapon for social change,” to progress social