“And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you-- ask what you can do for your country” (JFK). Sacrifice is the act of giving up something valued for the sake of something else regarded as more important and worthy. John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. each made difficult sacrifices to get something they both wanted: freedom. When one sees something they want they will do just about anything to get it. These men saw the issue of freedom from two different ways but both were trying to earn it. John F. Kennedy was a very conscientious and caring man who wanted to help try and fix something for his country. Meanwhile, Dr. King was actually living in that freedomless reality and was fighting for his life to be better. John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. had divergent viewpoints and differences with their sacrifices, for John F. Kennedy challenged Americans to put in more time and …show more content…
Martin Luther King Jr. was a “pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church” and “predominant leader in the Civil Rights Movement to end racial segregation and discrimination in America during the 1950s and 1960s” (Historynet). Just like his brothers and sisters, Dr. King faced harsh struggles with all of the racial discrimination. Everyone respected and looked up to him so he decided to start having peaceful protests. He kindly spoke up to try and make a difference for his race. While he was in the Birmingham jail, he wrote a letter to guard their nonviolent protest strategies against racism. With this letter Dr. King was sacrificing what he already had. He was putting out every last bit of the freedom he owned by sending that letter. He was also sacrificing his family’s lives and his own. If anyone found out about this letter he could have been killed right then and there. Finally, he was sacrificing making matters even worse. If this letter got in the wrong hands, there probably would have been even more violence in