To Kill A Mockingbird: Race Relations Then And Now

Improved Essays
Grant Harper
Mrs. Murray
Pre-AP English 9-Block 1
27 November 2017
Race Relations Then & Now

“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” “I have a dream” by Martin Luther King Jr. is a convincing speech that shows that he wants to end racism and live in harmony with all skin colors. The black community in To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee is not treated well at all because of their skin color. Even though African Americans are still being treated wrong, there has been a huge improvement in the treatment of African Americans from 1930 to today.
African Americans contributed to numerous roles in the community of Maycomb Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird.Here are a few of the black characters in the novel that played big roles. Tom
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Here are a few reasons why. The courtroom was represented as segregation in the 1930s because of the jim crow laws. One huge case was the murder of Emmett Till. Emmett Till was a 14 year old boy who was lynched because he supposedly hit on a white lady in a grocery store. Many people knew what had happened, but they were afraid because if they spoke about anything they would be lynched too. In To Kill A Mockingbird the courtroom is also segregated. Just because he was black he was found guilty, even after Atticus proved that Bob Ewell was found guilty of beating his daughter and Tom Robinson being completely innocent.
Segregation will one day stop completely. Even though segregation was abolished there are still many people that treat African Americans wrong. Some people still believe in white supremacy, but most of America has said no to segregation. Today many African Americans have jobs that whites could have to. After all of the changes that have happened over the past couple of decades segregation will end sooner than anyone will

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