The death of Martin Luther King, Jr was one that shocked the world. It was something so important so so many people. He was a sign of hope and the fighting spirit for a better tomorrow. As time went on there was people who of course didn’t agree with him but that never stopped him, from fighting for what he believed in and what he wanted to change. Robert F. Kennedy’s words after the death of Martin are ones with a sense of the need to come together. Robert F. Kennedy sees that it is a time for the country to be united not for it be torn apart because Martin was shot by a white man. He makes a great point that one of his family member was killed as well by a white man. Showing his connection with losing someone, but the fact is that race didn’t matter. Someone had an umbrage to …show more content…
Making everyone listen is when he brings everyone together, even if it is to mourn the death of Martin. Robert bring up the case that everyone can keep on fighting everyone (including their own race), but that wouldn't be the thing Martin would have wanted. For at that moment Robert just wants to bring everyone together. The moment Martin Luther King, Jr was shot, changed everything. The one man who was the face of a cause, and the one who risked his whole life at all causes for people he didn't even know. But just for the fact that they were also getting discriminated, by people who don’t understand their culture. They knew that the love people had for Martin was indescribable and Robert knew that if he was going to unite people, he had to remind them of the good that they did. In the second paragraph Robert states “Martin Luther King dedicated his life...that effort.” . This is the fact that Robert does acknowledge that Dr.King was a huge reason that we should never forget, but work together to try our hardest to make what he wanted to do