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The Legacy Of Rosa Parks

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Among many people, Rosa Parks is a woman to whom we need to give recognition. Mostly known for the Montgomery Bus Boycott, she worked with many people to solve issues of segregation and was a great known civil rights activist. She worked for job discrimination between race, education, and affordable housing. She was a big part of this issue, as she had lived in a time when the United States was going under segregation and discrimination between white and black. Black people would always have to listen to the white since the white was superior then, and this was their life. Yet Rosa Parks was poised in this issue and didn’t let it stop her from doing great things. Soon with the Montgomery Bus Boycott, and The United States Congress honoring …show more content…

This achievement was rare in her time as it was not very likely that black people had gotten their diplomas in Alabama. Later in the 1940s, she founded the Montgomery NAACP Youth Council. Which was made to “build Black political power to end structural racism” and “fight racial injustice by building Black political, social, and economic power” according to naacp.org. Finally, on December 1st, 1955, Rosa gets arrested for refusing to give up her bus seat to a white man. Resulting in her being arrested and put into jail for a brief time, and for her paying a fine. In 1992 she published her autobiography saying this: “People always say that I didn't give up my seat because I was tired, but that isn't true. I was not tired physically, or no more tired than I usually was at the end of a working day. I was not old, although some people have an image of me as being old then. I was forty-two. No, the only tired I was, was tired of giving in.” Soon after, she gets in touch with Martin Luther King Jr, to support her case of getting arrested for the bus seat. This then started the Montgomery Bus …show more content…

And now with Rosa Parks, it could change. After getting arrested from the bus, blacks around the city started the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The Montgomery Bus Boycott was a sociopolitical protest against the segregation of public transit in Montgomery Alabama. Together with Martin Luther King, Rosa Parks, and the Montgomery Improvement Association, they made almost 75% of public transit customers black in Montgomery for more than a

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