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    A Letter from Birmingham Jail was written on April 16, 1963 by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.,( on the margins of newspaper) but is still relevant today. Referring back the reading from last week on why God allows evil, MLK understood what it meant to be a Christian and what the journey looked like. He understood that as Christ suffered, he would too. The most captivating part was that he was okay with carrying the gospel of freedom at any cost as lines 38-44 declare. As we discussed on Thursday,…

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    The letter written by Martin Luther King, Jr. titled Letter from Birmingham Jail, is written to put forth a message. Throughout the letter written, King is diving into the concern surrounding just and unjust issues towards the African American community in Birmingham. This argument is addressed when Martin Luther King, Jr. states "One may well ask, 'How can you advocate breaking some laws and obeying others?' The answer is found in the fact that there are two types of laws: there are just laws,…

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    Both authors were adept communicators and convincers. They knew their audiences. They knew exactly what to say, how to say it, and when to say it. King’s sincere, assertive, and righteous tone make “Letter from the Birmingham Jail,” a powerful justification of his actions, and worthy request for forgiveness and support from his peers in the church. The subject of racism is serious, so it must be discussed with a serious tone. His ethos as a church and community leader makes him appear as an…

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    Letter from a Birmingham Jail Analysis Essay In this letter, King uses various tones to respond to a group of white clergymen who argue that his way of fighting social injustice is improper and to justify his means to try to achieve his purpose. King is a true civil rights activist and believes in only acting respectfully and nonviolently, but at the same time, the white clergymen, advocates of civil rights, condemn his nonviolent protest. King is “not unmindful of the difficulties involved”…

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    The Letter Read Around The World On April 16, 1963, while Martin Luther King Jr. was in jail for participating in a civil rights protest, he wrote a letter to eight clergymen to plead his case why the protests happening in Birmingham and all over the south were just. “Letter from Birmingham Jail” not only took the clergy by surprise, it took the whole nation by surprise. At the time of the letters publication, the nation was still divided by the Mason-Dixon line but for a different reason…

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    Civil Disobedience and Letter from Birmingham Jail Two different men from two different time period made their writing a master piece against government brutality by using many literary devices in their writing to convey their message. Thoreau and King Jr. were famously known to be highly against the injustice of the American government legislative system, they tried to help and persuade people in their writing by incorporating a lot of literary devices. Their main writing goal is that “now is…

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    In the passages "Letter from Birmingham Jail" by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr and "Speech at the March on Washington" by Josephine Bake and "form Letter to Viceroy, Lord Irwin" each passage shows many examples of equality, and how non-violence can bring equal rights. To achieve true freedom one most use non-violence means in order to find a peaceful solution. To begin with discrimination people should respect the religion or color of the person and not make them less. Based on the "Speech at…

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    Dr. Martin Luther King’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” introduced the class to the battle of what is “just” in our lives and what course of action should be taken when unjust laws are being forced upon people. In “Deconstructing Dr. Martin Luther King’s ‘Letter from a Birmingham Jail’ and the Strategy of Nonviolent Resistance” the authors, Conra D. Gist and Karsonya Wise Whitehead, argue that King’s nonviolent strategy in the Civil Rights Movement was pivotal to the success and equality…

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    assignments from this week, which includes chapter two in Soul of a Citizen, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” and Gene Sharp’s “The Methods of Nonviolent Action.” Chapter two was an interesting chapter, because the beginning had talked about the strategies of Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr, and how President Nixon bailed Rosa Park out of Jail. I have always been fascinated with the civil right movement in the 1960’s and reading about activist gives me hope that…

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    Letter from Birmingham Jail Many years ago, Martin Luther King Jr was sitting in a jail in Birmingham, Alabama for marching against segregation.From his cell he wrote an astonishing analysis of what constitutes a just law and a law. During this time people were protesting to gain equal rights for colored people, to outlaw racial injustices. Slavery had ended after the civil war, however, the life of black Americans had improved a little. Black people were forced to ride in the back of the bus.…

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