Emmett Till (1941-1955) Background and early years: Emmett Louis "Bobo" Till, born on July 25, 1941, is a 14 year old black boy from Chicago, Miss and Miss. A small town in the province of the province was cruelly killed. His murder was considered as one of the important events to stimulate the new civil rights movement. In the case of his death, the main suspects were guilty, but they later convicted guilty. Till's mother, Mommy, asserted an open coffin and an open funeral, everyone will be able to see how cruelly he was killed.
August 28, 1955 Young, African-American, 14-year old boy, Emmett Louis "Bobo" Till was killed after making a white woman in Money in Mississippi State ("Emmett Till", 2014). The story of Emmetil raises concerns about the racism still prevailing in the South in 1955, even after trying to eliminate apartheid and become nationally equal. Emmet 's strict murder and unfair trial shines the darkness and inequality spread in the South during the civil rights movement. "Although violent acts may kill a murderer, you can not kill a murderer, but this is not a lie of a murderer; it does not determine the truth, violent acts are even murderous, honest People, but this is not murder or dishonest violence can lead to murder or hatred, but it will not kill hatred.
The murder of Emmettir gave an understanding of the terrorist attacks of apartheid and racial discrimination in the United States. In August 1955, a teenager in Chicago, Emmett Till, visited his family in Mississippi, but he was in a state far from his home town. Mississippi is dominated by apartheid and imposes severe restrictions on its population of African Americans. Obviously flirting with a white woman, the young tire was cruelly murdered. The murder of Emmettir became a symbol of the civil rights movement, which helped to begin the request for equal rights to all ethnic groups and races in the United States.