Adversity and inspiration both marked the early years of Martin Luther King Jr.'s life. He was raised in a segregated environment with common racial discrimination after being born in Atlanta, Georgia, in 1929. He grew up in a middle class family with loving parents and siblings. King was raised in a very strong religious background, his father Martin Luther King was a Baptist minister. King's first experience of racism was when he was six, in Sunday school he and his white playmate would play with each other all the time, until they each went to different schools and that boy told King that, his dad said he can't play with him anymore. King thrived intellectually in spite of these difficulties; at the age of 15, he dropped out of school and …show more content…
King was inspired to fight for justice and equality for African Americans by his encounters with prejudice and injustice. Following his sociology degree from Morehouse, he pursued a PhD in theology at Boston University. In order to oppose discrimination and segregation, he took part in marches, protests, and boycotts during this period, becoming more and more committed in the civil rights struggle. One of the movement's most important individuals, he rose to prominence fast thanks to his persuasive speaking and leadership abilities. Growing up in the segregated South and receiving an education that reinforced his strong sense of social justice influenced Martin Luther King Jr. throughout his early life. Inspiring future generations, his legacy will be defined by his unwavering dedication to nonviolent activism and the pursuit of equality. Prominent civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. promoted nonviolence as a strategy for bringing about social change. His key claims were that real development can only be made peacefully and that using violence only serves to reproduce