Martin Luther King Jr. was a strong supporter of Civil Rights for African American, but also a peacekeeper between blacks and whites. He was a well-educated man and spoke with authority and eloquence when being interviewed and when giving speeches. Dr. King while ministering his congregation saw the injustice of African American people and the prejudice he went through while growing up and raising a family. Martin Luther King Jr. was an vital part of the Civil Right Movements.
Early Life of Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King Jr. was born in George 1929, his father was a pastor and his mother a school teacher. MLK Jr. went to a segregated school in elementary and on to Morehouse College falling in his father’s footsteps, attending for medicine and law. King had great inspiration from Dr. Benjamin Mays the president at Morehouse. He attended Crozer Theological Seminary in PA when he decided to go into ministry, after receiving his B.A in Divinity. MLK Jr. shortly after attended Boston University were earned a Doctorate in Systematic Theology.
Montgomery Bus Boycott
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King got involved with the Montgomery Bus Boycott when Rosa Parks was arrested for not moving out of her seat for a white man, even though she was seated in the correct area of the segregated bus according to History.com. The boycott lasted 381 days which caused economic stress for the bus company and downtown business owners. The bus company desegregated the bus because without the African Americans paying fares because of the boycott the bus company was headed to bankruptcy. During this time Dr. King’s home was bombed and seven white men were charged but MLK Jr and several other black men were arrested for anti-boycott laws. A deal was made that all charges were dropped against the white and black men involved in the boycott and bombing, but MLK Jr. still had to pay a $500