Analytical Essay On Freedom Summer

1073 Words5 Pages

The author’s agreement about writing this book on Freedom Summer was to inform everyone in the world how Mississippi was badly mistreating African-American way back then. I feel like the author was trying to make a point by giving description, by explaining what Mississippi did to the African-American back during the 1964. I fully understand the authors purpose of writing Freedom Summer book. I feel like he wasn’t trying to offend anybody about writing this book, but he just wanted to let people in the world to know why things was like it was back then. It really explains how African-American was treated and didn’t have a voice of their own to speak their mind because of Mississippi hatred ways. The reason why Mississippi was the way they were …show more content…

The murder shocked project profoundly in Mississippi. Their awkwardly beaten body was discovered for about six weeks. Bob Moses call Freedom Summer a success but did say that the summer project had changed Mississippi. Bob Moses felt badly about the word success. He said that the summer project had change Mississippi. He also felt like the pattern of law enforcement was reversed after the past hundred years. Police was finally allowing protection in minority area where they never had it before. Why Freedom Democrats did not feel victorious at the Democratic National Convention in 1964 in Atlantic City. Freedom Democrats where planning to have a meeting again to rearrange the two seats that was at large. The Union Temple Baptist Church was fill with bitterness. More progress to come was told to the moderate black’s leaders that the delegation that two seats came to victory. But Freedom Democrats did not feel victories. They headed back to Mississippi where the sharecroppers would soon return to the fields, and volunteers would be gone taking with them the nation’s attention. The Freedom Summer experience change for those who participated in it. They have experience the hatred, spread the hope, lifted and revived the overwhelmed dream of democracy. The author calls the racial reconciliation that has occurred in Mississippi in the years since Freedom Summer. Modern Mississippi, having achieved a racial reconciliation to rival South Africa’s, has more black elected officials than any other