During the citizen movement many African Americans struggled for their human rights, but they were peaceful. The very important element is free riding. Bus activists are black and white, and all bus stops have some intense violence, and some free knights will die. The ideal culture in the south of that time was that African Americans should not move forward. This is a class confrontation, in which the ruling class discriminates blacks, not allowing the same bus to travel with white people, and decides to peacefully rebel.
Freedom rider was a group of white and African-American civil rights activists who took part in a free ride and participated in a southern bus tour in 1961 to protest the isolated bus terminal. Liberty Knights is trying to use a "white restricted" washroom and lunch counter at bus stops in Alabama, South Carolina and other Southern states. These groups face the arrest of police along their route - and the terrible violence of white protesters - but they are attracting international attention to their causes.
On May 4, 1961, a group of 13 African-American and Caucasian human rights activists began a series of bus trips throughout South America to protest free-ride tours, isolation of the interstate bus terminal did. . Freedom Cavaliers, recruited by the American Civil Rights Organization 's Racial Equality Meeting (CORE) left Washington DC and tried to integrate the bus station facility into the Shennan district. An African-American free knight tries to use a "washroom only" washroom and a lunch counter. The organization encountered enormous violence among white protesters on the way, but it also raised international attention to their cause. In the coming months, hundreds of free knights took part in a similar strategy. In September 1961, the Interstate Commerce Commission announced a regulation prohibiting isolation of bus stops and train stops nationwide.
Free Knight The first 13 free riders took a bus to Washington, DC, New Orleans, Louisiana to dispel apartheid in public accommodations (hotels, motels, restaurants, cinemas, stadiums, concert halls) It was. . In 1946, the Supreme Court banned the separation of interstate buses, but black people are still sitting behind the southern bus, and the use of the 'white only' washroom in Southpia is not allowed. In 1961, passengers on the first bus were attacked by angry mobs in Anniston and Birmingham in Alabama. Outside Anniston, the second bus was hit by a fire bomb after the tire was cut. With this intense incident, President John F. Kennedy urged Ridder to provide federal protection to ensure that the rider headed to Jackson, Mississippi. According to Chapter 2 of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, discrimination in these places is prohibited.