On Good Friday in 1963, 53 black, directed by Martin Luther monarch, Jr., marched into downtown Birmingham to protest against the segregation laws of life. All of them were arrested. This initiated the clergy this southern city, to make a note of appeal to the black community to stop their demonstration. When the monarch was criticized by the Assembly of the secular clergy, who accused him for the deposition of aggression, he wrote a subdued, but passionate letter response to his colleagues, smuggling it into toilet paper, the field of ballots actually cancel any paper available to him. This note has appeared in a Birmingham newspaper. In response, Martin Luther monarch prepared paper, that would mean rotating the issue of municipal rights movement and ensure a lasting inspiration for the struggle for racial equality. while not actually speak, a letter from Mr. Luther King from Birmingham Jail was supposed to have the same effect. That he certainly did.
Martin Luther King's "Letter from Birmingham Jail" strives to justify the desperate need for nonviolent direct action, absolute immorality of unjust rules together with the fact that only the law but also increase the probability of "Negro" resorting to further disorder and bloodshed, in addition to his complete disappointment in connection with a place of worship, which in his terms, not lived up to their responsibilities as people of God. justification for the king to the eight clergymen to challenge segregation begins with a deeper explanation of their activities, non-violent direct action to hunt for the creation of such an emergency and to develop such a tension that a community which, of course, denied the talks had to fight the issue. "