Have you ever wondered about the U.S. history? Even if you didn’t, you might have heard of the civil rights movement. A few brave leaders risked their lives to fight for having an equal right. The civil rights movement was from 1995 to 1968. The civil rights movement was a very social, legal, and political act that the blacks encountered with a lot of effort and determination. With the help of brave leaders, African Americans were finally able to have same rights and equal treatment that the whites had. The civil rights movement has won victory.
Unfair Treatments
African Americans did not like the ways that they were treated by the whites. People felt very strongly to the fact that that they should not be treated like
that. They thought that they should be able to have the same rights that the whites had. These people wanted to do something about it instead of just allowing themselves be teased and tortured. They fought for what they wanted and it wasn’t very easy for them. Back then, blacks and white were to be separated. In addition the qualities of the materials that they used were beyond different. For example, the water fountains that the blacks drank from was worn out, broken, cracked, and nasty. However, the whites’ water fountain were clean as crystal and there probably was not even the faintest crack in the water fountain. Blacks didn’t have the right to do many things as well. According to http://www.cliffsnotes.com/literature/l/a-lesson-before-dying/critical-essays/the-precivil-rights-south, it stated, “Southern states took immediate steps to prevent blacks from exercising their voting rights.” In addition to that, the text also states, “These included establishing poll taxes, literacy tests, property and registration requirements, and the "grandfather clause," which allowed an individual to vote only if his grandfather could vote as of January 1, 1866. As you can see, African Americans weren’t allowed to do a lot of things that the others were allowed to do. Whites usually got first priority as well. For example, on buses, blacks got back seats while whites got front seats. If the fronts were filled up, blacks must give up their seats so that the whites could have it. This leads to a very dedicated, loyal, honorable, sufficient, confident and brave leader whose name is Rosa Parks.
A Courageous Leader
Rosa Parks was a civil rights activists. She refused to give up her seat to a white person, in which, she got arrested.