Sunday, November 11, 2007

Martin Luther King 1929-1968

Martin Luther King was as American clergymen, Nobel Peace Prize winner and one of the principal leaders of the American civil rights movements.
King was born on January 15, 1929 in Atlanta, Georgia. His father was a Baptist min­ister, his mother a school­teacher. Originally named Michael, he was later renamed Martin. He entered Morehouse College in 1944 and then went to Crozer Religious Seminaryto undertake postgraduate study, receiving his doctor­ate in 1955.
Returning to the South to become pastor of a Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama, King first achieved nation­al renown when he helped mobilise the black boycott of the Montgomery bus system in 1955. This was Organised after Rosa Parks, a black woman, refused to give up her seat on the bus to a white man - in the segregated south, black people could only sit at the back of the bus. The 382-day boycott led the buscompany to change its reg­ulations, and the supreme court declared such segre­gation unconstitutional.
In 1957, King was active in the organisation of the Southern Leadership Christian Conference (SCLC), formed to co-ordinate protests against discrimi­nation. He advocated non­violent direct action based on the methods of Gandhi, who led protests against British ruleculmi­nating in India's independ­ence in 1947.
In 1963, King led mass protests against discrimi­natory practices in Birmingham, Alabama where the white popula­tion were violently resist­ing desegregation. The city was dubbed 'Bombingham' as attacks against civil rights protesters increased, and King was arrested and jailed for his part in the protests.After his release, King participated in the enor­mous civil rights march in Washington in August 1963, and delivered his famous "I have a dream"speech, predicting a day when the promise of free­dom and equality for all would become a reality in America.
In 1964, he was award­ed the Nobel Peace Prize. In 1965, he led a campaign to register blacks to vote. The same year the US Congress passed the Voting Rights Act outlaw­ing the discriminatory practices that had barred blacks from voting in the south.
As the civil rights move­ment became increasingly radicalised, King found that his message of peace­ful protest was not shared by many in the younger generation. King began to protest against the Vietnam war and poverty levels in the US. He was assassinated on April 4, 1968 during a visit to Memphis, Tennessee.