Being a colored person in a white community can be very difficult. It is especially challenging for Tom Robinson in To Kill A Mockingbird, and also minorities in real life. Every day, they are discriminated against, and it is very unfair. To Kill a Mockingbird has many non-fiction parts, which makes the novel better than many others. Harper Lee presented Tom’s trial in ways that can be easily compared to real life trials, such as the Scottsboro trial.
Tom Robinson’s trial was definitely the most dramatic, yet the most realistic part in this piece of writing. In the trial, Tom Robinson was accused of raping Mayella Ewell. Tom claimed that he did not do it, but many people did not believe him. Tom was a young black male, and Mayella was a young white female. Because of his skin …show more content…
Most of the colored people knew he was innocent, but they could not do anything to help him because of the all-white jury. There were most likely white people who believed that Tom was innocent too, but for one reason or another, did not say anything. Some of them would have known the Robinson family and realized that Tom was a good …show more content…
All of the trials took place in Alabama. Tom’s trial ended with Tom getting shot, and therefore dying. The Scottsboro trials ended with eight of the nine boys being sentenced to death. Another similarity is that the trials were very discriminatory due to the racial differences. Also, the juries were entirely white. Both cases involved a key white man that supported the accused. This person was Atticus in To Kill A Mockingbird and Judge James Horton in the Scottsboro trials. Both men tried very hard to prove the innocence of the accused, but both failed. Tom Robinson’s trial was very similar to the Scottsboro