I didn't expect racial discrimination to be so terrible. In the 1950s and 1960s, so many people went out and didn't know if they would come back alive. They went to school with huge fear every day. Compared to us, we are so happy now, at least there is no race in the country. Discrimination, don't risk your life, go to school with great fear.
To make the classmates identify with each other, Teacher Irene drew a line in the middle of the classroom and asked a lot of questions, did any friends die in the racial struggle? Two or more friends died? Three or more friends died? Let the classmates on both sides walk in again and again, then come back, and finally let them say the name of the dead friend and mourn for them.
Irene and her husband eventually divorced. The husband said that Irene did not love herself, but her imagination. Maybe it was right. When they fell in love with him, both of them were full of enthusiasm. One wanted to be a teacher and the other wanted to be an architect. Teacher, but then one worked 3 jobs to buy books for students, insisted on the ideal in his heart, and was full of enthusiasm for his career, but the other began to give up, saying that he wanted to do it does not mean that he could do it. I think when the partner is too bright, the other half In fact, I have low self-esteem in my heart, and I can't stick to my ideals like the other party. It is like a huge sun that is too hot for others to bear. Only the same huge sun or an ocean that can accommodate the hot sun can spend the rest of my life together.
Black Civil Rights Movement On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court of the United States, in order to change the image of the United States in the world, made a judgment in the case of Brown v. Tobuka Board of Education: the segregated education implemented by public schools was unequal and violated the 14th Amendment to the Constitution. On December 1, 1955, Mrs. R. Parks, a black man in Montgomery City, Alabama, refused to give up her seat to a white man on a bus and was arrested and jailed. Under the leadership of young black pastor ML King, the city's 50,000 blacks united to stop riding the bus for a year, finally forcing the car companies to desegregate. In 1957, Pastor Kim and his supporters formed the Southern Christian Leadership Conference to extend the movement into all areas of Southern life. In 1958, 21 major cities in the South organized rallies to mobilize blacks to fight for civil rights. On February 1, 1960, four black college students in Greensboro, North Carolina, entered a restaurant and sat still when a white waiter ordered them to go away. This heroic act was immediately echoed by black students in the South and developed into a mass sit-in movement that forced restaurants in nearly 200 cities to lift quarantines. In early May 1961, the Congress for Racial Equality launched the Free Passenger Movement. Soon, with the participation of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and with the support of many whites, it gradually developed into a national movement, forcing southern states to desegregate interstate bus rides. In 1968, Martin Luther King, Jr., the leader of the black movement in the United States and a Christian pastor who promoted the theory of nonviolence, was assassinated. 200 years after the founding of the United States, Martin Luther King Jr.'s movement for the rights of black people emerged.
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