The age of Mississippi is in the era of Mississippi's Anne Moody, and she is widely spoken about her participation in the civil rights movement. The civil rights movement contains many problems that many people do not agree with. With the advent of the Mississippi era, readers have witnessed the efforts of many people to achieve equal rights. Like many other young people, Anne Moody took part in the civil rights movement because he wanted to change his position.
Anne Moody (15th September 1940 - 5th February 2015) wrote about poverty and black experience in the Countryside of Mississippi and about participation in civil rights movement through NAACP, CORE, and SNCC I am a writer. Moody's living in Sentireville, Michigan, suffered from racial discrimination and apartheid since she was a young age and continued throughout adulthood in the southern United States. [Moody], [Née Essie Mae] [Moody] was the oldest child among the eight children on September 15, 1940. After her parents disbanded at the age of 5 or 6, her and her mother, Elmira, aka Toosweet, grew up in Centerville, Michigan, while her father and his new wife, Emma, lived in nearby Woodville It was. When I was young, Moody's started working for the white family in the area. I cleaned the house, helped the children spend only a few dollars a week on their homework, helped get the best results at school, and helped Mount Pleasant Special church
The arrival of the Mississippi era was 19 years from Ann from 4 years old to 23 years old. Moody's own personal development is similar to the development of the civil rights movement and symbolizes its development. Anne Moody was born in Essie May Moody in 1940. She grew up in Wilcarson County, a village characterized by extreme poverty and racial discrimination. Her family worked at the farm until her father left the family. Her mother, like various white family maids, supplements a small income of Ann for her family. As the civil rights movement matured in the early 1950's, Ann grew up as a young woman. She is also increasingly aware of racial inequality. When Emmett Till was murdered in 1955, Anne first heard about the National Color Improvement Association and began considering the possibility to overthrow the system to suppress African Americans.