American Hero Rosa Parks "Please show me a hero, I write a tragedy for you" - J. Scott Fitzgerald. Definition of the hero is to show courage and self - sacrifice not only for themselves but also for the general public. As one of the largest civil rights activists in the United States, Rosa Parks was living a normal woman's life until a courageous decision was made against the illegal government. To confront what you believe is something that we think is easy, but in reality it is very difficult.
Rosa Parks, a recent great civil rights activist and writer, struggles to occupy a part of the American hero Pantheon. Known for being a simple and unforgettable contempt that Montgomery's bus boycotted in 1955 and urged the civil rights movement to start effectively, she served as Secretary of the Michigan State Assemblyman John Conyers, I spent the rest of my life in a relatively ambiguous way. I retired until 1988. As she actively engaged in struggle for racial justice, reproductive rights and housing equality, park life is suffering and suffering and characterized by long term illness and lack of resources. In the following year she donated most of the income from speech activity to the scholarship fund she co - founded.
Rosa Park is always regarded as an American hero. Her historic 1955 Montgomery Bus protested the apartheid system deep in the south in the south and promoted the civil rights movement. Her behavior has shaped the world we live today by advancing the cause of equality. But, if someone did the same protest during the past few months of Rosa Parks and had little credit anyway? Please enter Claudette Colvin. Claudette Colvin was born in Montgomery, Alabama on September 5, 1939. When she was fifteen, Kolvin took a bus at Montgomery on March 2, 1955, refused to give a seat to white passengers and was arrested. It is Black History Week (the predecessor of Black History Month) and I am studying black leaders such as Harriet Tubman and Suhona. Korvin said her idea of her protest. "My head is full of black history, you know the oppressions we experienced.
Rosa Park. As the "mother of civil rights movement", world famous Rosa Parks refused to abandon his seat on 1 December 1955 and changed the history of African Americans. Dr. King planned a boycott of the bus. In Montgomery, Alabama, it lasted 382 days, 90% of blacks participated. The court finally ruled that separation of city bus service is unconstitutional (text). The success of this boycott has led to demonstrations of nonviolent citizenship for hundreds of years in the south and later throughout the country.