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Letter from Birmingham Jail 6181 Views
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Description:
Martin Luther King, Jr. was way more than a speech man.
Transcript
- 00:05
Letter from Birmingham Jail, a la Shmoop. In your English and literature classes…
- 00:10
…you’ve surely read your fair share of novels, poems, stories and plays.
- 00:15
But a letter?!
- 00:16
What’s next… an office memo?
- 00:18
Believe it or not, there have been some pretty powerful and influential letters written in
Full Transcript
- 00:23
our nation’s history.
- 00:25
One man who really knew how to string a series of words together was Dr. Martin Luther King,
- 00:30
Jr.
- 00:31
Whether the words were coming out of his mouth or out of his pen…
- 00:34
…he knew how to stir emotion, and how to move people to action.
- 00:38
First, let’s be clear… King wasn’t in jail because he had been caught breaking and
- 00:43
entering, or because he wasn’t keeping up with alimony payments.
- 00:46
He had been marching against racial segregation.
- 00:49
While in jail, he wrote this letter.
- 00:52
It was in response to the “Call to Unity,” a statement made by a number of Birmingham
- 00:56
clergymen who felt it was wrong of King to demonstrate and stir up trouble in the streets
- 01:01
to get his point across. But King wasn’t about to let them… rain
- 01:10
on his parade. Besides, the black community wasn’t really given any more… peaceable
- 01:15
options.
- 01:17
In his letter, King insisted that when it came to unjust laws…
- 01:21
…it was the people’s moral obligation to see that they were eradicated, by whatever
- 01:27
non-violent methods they deemed most appropriate or effective.
- 01:32
So, basically… no one was going to tell him he couldn’t protest against something
- 01:36
he didn’t believe was right.
- 01:38
You tell ‘em, Doc. King wrote, “Injustice anywhere is a threat
- 01:43
to justice everywhere.
- 01:44
“We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of
- 01:51
destiny.
- 01:52
“Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly…
- 01:56
“Anyone who lives inside the United States can never be considered an outsider…”
- 02:02
His words were a bit much for some people to swallow at first…
- 02:06
…but they certainly had an impact.
- 02:08
The letter was published in the New York Post…
- 02:10
…and later in King’s book Why We Can’t Wait.
- 02:13
It became incredibly popular, and was passed around, copied, and quoted for years to come.
- 02:19
It went a long way in swaying the minds of those struggling with the issue…
- 02:22
…and maybe planted a seed or two of doubt in the minds of even the most rigidly stubborn
- 02:27
individuals. Without a doubt, it is one of the most significant
- 02:31
works ever to come out of a jail cell.
- 02:33
That is, if you don’t count the letter “How Much Longer Until Bubba and I Get a Chance
- 02:37
to Use the Community Bathroom?” by Inmate 43872.
- 02:41
Strangely, that letter was also published in a book entitled Why We Can’t Wait.
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