When I said the names of Sarah Grimke and Frederick Douglass, I thought about something. Abolitionist. Equal rights activist. Of course, these two work hard in order to get what they believe. Unfortunately, we do not have enough people to be like these two people. As England abolished slavery in 1834, we will continue this inhumane abuse for how long. Our country is in refusal and we pay for it unless we wake up as soon as possible.
The need for DeGarrison, Elizabeth Kadi Stanton, or Harriet Tubman is not a requirement of Frederic Douglas, William Wilberforce, Grimick's sister, William Lloyd, but the abolishmentists - the men and women who promise slavery in those days. did. Anytime, anywhere, the abolitionists demanded the abolition of slavery to their compatriots. Today the world is also watching slavery. It has basic signs of slavery. It survived even after the release of American law. Slavery should be defined as a comprehensive physical and / or psychological control of that person, with the aim of utilizing the person's effort and physical body to obtain the commercial or personal benefit of others I can. To end this ancient crime is the cause of modern abolitionists.
When talking in front of a women-mixed audience, South Carolina's abolishist sisters Sarah and Angelina Grimke boldly opposed slavery at public meetings (see Grimsk Sisters). Some male abolished people such as William Lloyd Garrison, Wendell Phillips, Frederic Douglas and others support the right to speak and participate equally in male counter-slavery activities. In one example, the women's representative of the World Slavery Treaty held in London in 1840 was rejected. So the garrisons refused their seats and joined them as balcony onlookers.
In the preface of Frederick Douglas' life story, Frederick Douglas wrote about himself about William Lloyd Garrison, a member of the Abelitionist and Anti - Slavery Association. When he talked to him, he said, "Patrick Henry, the revolutionary reputation has never talked about in the cause of freedom, I have not heard from the newly captured fugitive. Frederick Douglas continues to tell his story ... The story of life in Frederick Douglas details the repression that Frederick Douglas had experienced before escaping freedom In his story, Douglas is a slave pain, cruelty And provided quick reader information on humiliation, he pointed out the atrocities of this agency to perpetrators and victims.As a slave, Frederick Douglas witnessed black atrocities, Their only crime was the wrong color, he explained about that pain,