On August 13, 1860, Pheobe Ann Moses was born in Jacob and Susan Moses in a room in Patterson, Ohio. When Anne was about 6 years old, her father breathed in a storm when he traveled 18 miles from the town and died in the spring of 1866. After that, Susan could not support six children. After three children got married, Mrs. Moses was forced to send three children to the neighbor 's house. One day, while dusting furniture, Ann decided to remove his father's gun and clean it.
Sheyann Webb, born in Selma, Alabama in 1956, grew up with a family of eight children. Opportunity to change her life track when she was only 8 years old. When we saw a group of blacks and whites standing together, Weber passed through the AME church in Brown 's church. It was an abnormal situation in Alabama in the 1960s. She followed that group and went to church and eventually attended a civil rights conference. Weber and her best friend Rachel West returned later to the church to listen to Martin Luther King. Kim's words urged two girls to participate in the civil rights movement. On another occasion they met this promise when Weber and West arrived at the church to attend the church. He allowed them to stay and attend the meeting; after that, he asked if they would go to the parade. They replied that they are planning to march for freedom.
Sheyann Webb was born in Alabama in 1956 and participated in the civil rights movement at the age of 8, but after encountering Martin Luther King this effort was strengthened. On March 7, 1965, Weber became the youngest participant in civil rights. Demonstration "Bloody Sunday". She collaborated on her experience about Selma, Lord, Selma, and became a television movie. Sheyann Webb, born in Selma, Alabama in 1956, grew up with a family of eight children. Opportunity to change her life track when she was only 8 years old. When we saw a group of blacks and whites standing together, Weber passed through the AME church in Brown 's church. It was an abnormal situation in Alabama in the 1960s. She followed that group and went to church and eventually attended a civil rights conference.
In the context of the ethnic bondage of the 1960s, Selma, Lord, and Selma were based on the memoirs of Sheyann Webb and Rachel West Nelson "Selma, Lord, Selma: Memory of the Childhood of Civil Rights" (1997). It was produced by Walt Disney Pictures screened on the ABC network on January 17, 1999, the day before the king's day off. Selma's chronicle in 1965 marched to Montgomery led by King and many famous black and white people leaders. Based on these historical events, including the bloody Sunday fear of the Edmund Petas Bridge on March 7, 1965, the movies oppose the victory of American sexual non-violent citizens. The movie is starred by the king's daughter Jolanda King to respect the king's legacy of equality, love, change, and courage before prejudice, racial discrimination, and hatred.