Summary Of Letter From A Birmingham Jail By Martin Luther King

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In his 1963 “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” Dr. Martin Luther King Junior essentially states that “Shallow understanding from people of good will is more frustrating than misunderstanding from people of ill will.” This quote by Dr. King is extremely true, and relative to anyone. His quote’s understanding is hard for anyone to see on the surface, but after taking a while to realize its meaning, it makes sense why the quote is considered famous. Understanding the quote begins with breaking down the entire sentence. “Shallow understanding…” represents the basic knowledge, or foundation that people teach to one another. Then the “people of good will… (and) people of ill will” represent people with good morals, versus those without those good morals, and rather oppose it. The …show more content…

King faced. During his time, he was famous for being a civil rights activist. He would meet many people, who specifically to understand the quote would be Christian people, or people of a faith similar to his, which represent the people of good will, and discriminating people who were against him, or people of ill will. The reason he says that it is more frustrating to have shallow understanding from people of good will is due to the fact that many Christians, which Dr. King considered his brothers and sisters, did nothing to help in the civil rights movement. They would stay on the sidelines, watching what was happening to Dr. King’s people, of them being beaten and not being given their natural born rights. It was then that Dr. King must had come up with this concept that it was frustrating to see people who had similar beliefs to him, and were claiming to be loving to others would watch on the sideline, even though they had a “shallow understanding” of

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