was always seen as a target of violence for his racial equality thought, but he was not afraid of it and even promoted the idea of non-violence to others. In 1963, Martin Luther King Jr. and his supporters were arrested and sent to the jail for objecting and exclaiming on the injustice treatment of the black people. In places such as Birmingham, Alabama, people were separated by their colors and the blacks were facing discrimination and violent threat by the whites. Because in King’s opinion the blacks already suffered from inequalities for too long, he thought they should not bear anymore but seeking for changes without using violence. “King believed nonviolence was essential for him as a man of God. He also believed that violence would ruin the chances for change. King and others were willing to go to jail for the cause of civil rights.” No matter how badly and harshly King had been treated, he continued upholding the idea of nonviolent protests, and he considered it as the primary goal. In King’s first book, Stride Toward Freedom, he clearly showed his belief in nonviolent resistance. “King wrote, is ‘‘a courageous confrontation of evil by the power of love’’ (King, Stride, 80). Both ‘‘morally and practically’’ committed to nonviolence, King believed that ‘‘the Christian doctrine of love operating through the Gandhian method of nonviolence was one of the most potent weapons available to oppressed people in their struggle for freedom’’ (King, Stride, 79; Papers 5:422).” He conveyed the importance of nonviolence that it could be an even more effective way than using violence in fighting for freedom and gaining respect. “Police forces didn’t hesitate to use violence against demonstrators and protesters, but in the face of their quiet civil resistance, the overblown physical techniques of force and brutality lost their power. ” The police force made a huge contrast to King and his followers’ actions and proved that using violence would never
was always seen as a target of violence for his racial equality thought, but he was not afraid of it and even promoted the idea of non-violence to others. In 1963, Martin Luther King Jr. and his supporters were arrested and sent to the jail for objecting and exclaiming on the injustice treatment of the black people. In places such as Birmingham, Alabama, people were separated by their colors and the blacks were facing discrimination and violent threat by the whites. Because in King’s opinion the blacks already suffered from inequalities for too long, he thought they should not bear anymore but seeking for changes without using violence. “King believed nonviolence was essential for him as a man of God. He also believed that violence would ruin the chances for change. King and others were willing to go to jail for the cause of civil rights.” No matter how badly and harshly King had been treated, he continued upholding the idea of nonviolent protests, and he considered it as the primary goal. In King’s first book, Stride Toward Freedom, he clearly showed his belief in nonviolent resistance. “King wrote, is ‘‘a courageous confrontation of evil by the power of love’’ (King, Stride, 80). Both ‘‘morally and practically’’ committed to nonviolence, King believed that ‘‘the Christian doctrine of love operating through the Gandhian method of nonviolence was one of the most potent weapons available to oppressed people in their struggle for freedom’’ (King, Stride, 79; Papers 5:422).” He conveyed the importance of nonviolence that it could be an even more effective way than using violence in fighting for freedom and gaining respect. “Police forces didn’t hesitate to use violence against demonstrators and protesters, but in the face of their quiet civil resistance, the overblown physical techniques of force and brutality lost their power. ” The police force made a huge contrast to King and his followers’ actions and proved that using violence would never