INTRODUCTION A series of African-American citizenship movements from 1955 to 1968 aimed at restoring the rights of African Americans and releasing them from social and racial discrimination. This movement changed the social and political structure of the United States. The main problem is that the movement achieved a successful result after "non-violent resistance" and established the fact that Christianity is peaceful and equitable. The birth of the civil rights movement: Since the establishment of the United States, the United States has suffered racial inequality.
The African-American human rights movement (1955-1968) is a biblical movement, which brings great social and political influence to the United States. Black clergymen, such as pastor Martin Luther King, Little Ralph Abenasi, Joseph Loy, Wyatt Walker, Fred Shawworth etc, rely on strategic beliefs to solve America's stubbornness. Racial Issues The black Christian leaders and their white allies unite to challenge the immoral apartheid system. By adopting the "non-violent resistance" approach they believed was based on the lifetime and sacrifice of Jesus of Nazareth, the civil rights movement from 1955 to 1968, the generation racism I tried to solve and correct unfairness. The founders of the United States are writing human rights of force majeure to the pursuit of life, freedom, and happiness, but many people do not think that this is true for black slaves and women.
From 1955 to 1968, a series of African-American civil rights movements aimed at restoring the rights of African-Americans and releasing them from social and racial discrimination. This movement changed the social and political structure of the United States. The main problem is that the movement achieved a successful result after "non-violent resistance" and established the fact that Christianity is peaceful and equitable. By 1955, according to the nonviolent resistance model of resistance and meditation, the policy of "large resistance" was adopted. Several successful campaigns include: Alabama Montgomery Bus Boycott (1955-1956), Greensboro North Carolina (1960), Montgomery, Alabama parade (1965))