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Challenge 6 friends to become an activist during the civil rights movement of the 1960's.

After seeing public bathrooms marked “white” or “colored” as a student in Nashville Tennessee, Nash was determined to fight racism. She attended nonviolent, civil disobedience workshops lead by Rev. James Lawson, and became a leader of the Nashville sit-ins, a nonviolent tactic to integrate restaurants around the city. Students would sit in “whites only” sections of lunch counters, accepting arrest and even violence to prove a point about making a change. She also helped found and led the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, the largest student activist group that led key grassroots action against discrimination during the civil rights movement.

As a student, she was part of a segregated school district in Virginia that crammed 450 kids into a 200 person building. She started a two week strike with the help of the NAACP to advocate for an integrated school district, marching to the town courthouse to make officials aware of the large difference in quality between black and white schools. In response, her house was burned to the ground. NAACP took her case to court, which became a part of the groundbreaking Brown v. Board of Education case that ruled "separate but equal” facilities based on race illegal.

He developed an interest in civil rights after seeing his African-American roommate experience prejudice. Attending an exchange program, he went to Fisk University and met John Lewis, a leader of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and decided to go on a Freedom Ride, a nonviolent action to test out integration laws on buses. He was arrested, and at one point ambushed during the ride. He was beaten so badly he was unconscious for two days and stayed in a hospital for five. His photos were used in many newspapers and magazines across the country, stirring even more support for the civil rights movement.
Great leaders, like Martin Luther King Jr., fought for equal rights, but it took many people risking their lives to change legal discrimination in this country. This experience put people in the shoes of the unknown people who risked their lives to change their communities for the better.
To get technical it’s the “separation of human beings into racial groups in daily life.” To put it simply, laws were used during the 20th century to keep groups separate and to discriminate against minority groups. These laws are no longer in place, but discrimination still exists.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed major forms of discrimination against racial, ethnic, gender, and religious groups, but it took many years of grassroots activism for these changes to actually happen. There are still many inequalities in housing, job opportunities, education, and health access for many minority groups that were born from the laws of the past.
Martin Luther King Jr. is a famous leader of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States. He is best known for using non-violent civil disobedience (refusal to follow certain laws) to fight legal discrimination. He was ultimately assassinated at the age of 39 because of his beliefs and active fight for equality for all individuals.
Discrimination is harder to detect now, as it’s no longer legal. Check out the 11 facts on discrimination to see the current state of racial problems in our country. It takes only a few individuals standing up to change things, so don’t hesitate to speak up when you see acts of discrimination in your community!
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