Analysis Of Letter From Birmingham Jail By Martin Luther King Jr.

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On April 16, 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote the “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” Martin Luther King, Jr. was a very sophisticated, wise, and an educated man who wanted to please and make things right for everyone. He always put others before himself and believed in helping people in need instead of sitting back and not accomplishing nothing. MLK lived by the quote “treat others the way you want to be treated.” He never used criticism in his work, nor “answer criticism of my work and ideas.” MLK did not believe that criticism was the answer for anything because he wanted everyone to be treated fairly.
For starters, Martin Luther King, Jr. was the definition of a great man because he effectively created a desired message by appealing to his …show more content…

The fact that MLK explains that an agreement was reached and promises were still being broken even before they took action enhanced his argument. The thought of all the possible outcomes they had to endure in order for their point to get across in a nonviolent way began with posting signs up all around town so, their voices could be heard. Everyone knew that easter would be a busy shopping season so, MLK decided to postpone a protest he had in mind due to elections around easter time. This shows that this was not out of spite and was carefully thought …show more content…

MLK wants others to understand where he is coming from until they are on the other side of the word “nigger” or have to explain to their children that they cannot attend certain places and why white people are mean to black people no one will understand the difficulty of being an African American in that era. MLK understands that laws are not supposed to be broken, but he explains how some laws have been broken and others are unjust. To put into simpler terms MLK states, “any law that uplifts human personality is just.’ Any law that degrades human personality is unjust.” MLK states this in the hopes that they can understand the point he is trying to make. MLK believes that one who breaks unjust laws and takes the punishment is considered to be respecting the law at its