The story "The Warriors Do not Cry" is a true story of a girl named Melba Patillo who was in charge of integrating Central High School (CHS) with Little Rock in Arkansas State State in 1957 with eight other blacks . . The courage and strength of the group known as "Little Rock Nine" helped shape the civil rights movement. The story is written eloquently through the eyes of Melba Patillo, the author 's hero, the narrator and this historical story.
This story was held in Little Rock, Arkansas when African Americans fought for equal rights in the early 1950s. In 1954, when the Supreme Court ruled that separation at Brown v. Topeka Board of Education was illegal, Melba became a seventh grade. Melba and the other eight enthusiastic black students volunteered to subscribe to CHS, his work was harassed and he dissatisfied her father because he was reluctant to do anything.
Melba rarely knows her world is upside down. Although the federal ruling is illegal, the state of Arkansas still opposes integration and the governor sent a national guard to prevent "Little Rock Nine" from participating in CHS.
Melba accompanied her mother on the first day of school, but he fell down with an angry white mob while watching the National Guard. Melba began to wonder whether the fight was worth the price of all violence, but Indian grandmother encouraged her and reminded her that "God 's warriors do not cry." I strongly use passive resistance as a weapon against adversity
On the second day of school, President Dwight Eisenhower ordered the Federal Army to accompany "Little Rock Nine" at CHS's gate. When entering the doorway, Melba 's difficulty continued until her second grade as the angry white students repeatedly attacked her and the face drowned in the acid.
Melba could make friends with a few white people who expressed their support. After a freshman at Melba 's CHS, the governor tried to close all the high schools in the province and stop the integration opportunities. The school finally opened in 1960, and only "Little Stone City No. 9" did graduate from CHS. Some people graduated by participating in a communication course including San Francisco State University's last entry to Melba
This book is an engaging reading that shows whether strength, courage and nonviolent passive resistance can outweigh hatred. Master writer Melba Patillo enthusiastically tells her story and provides an amazing order to the audience as it approaches the end.
Warriors should not cry. The burning war memoirs integrate with the theory of Little Stone Brown and the Board of Education: "In the field of education the doctrine of" separation and equality "does not have another educational facility that is essentially unequal I will conclude. In the book of "Warrior Do not Cry" by Melba Pattillo Beals, the warriors are not crying. The author explains her and the other eight African-American teenagers in the reaction and emotion of racial hatred and discrimination received in Little. During apartheid the number of years rock music was abolished with Arkansas She tells the story of her nine students from the age of 16 and starts to write a diary until she is the last few days of Little Rock's Central High School .
In her memoirs, warriors do not cry, Melba Pattillo Beals will bring students into the activities of Central High School which makes Little Rock Nine 's physical and mental abusive quarrel felt. Educational Decision Bills' books tell the story of young people who become casual heroes when their lives cross the movement of justice in education. This book is about Melba's high school experience, so for students it is near the house. They want to know how she can move. They admire Indian grandmother, but they think it is unfair when Melba is not allowed to participate in school wrestling competitions. When her friend did not attend her birthday party, they felt Melba's pain, they applauded Minniejean to pour pepper to the boy who harassed her.