Category: Uncategorized

A letter to John Lewis # 2

Dear John Lewis

Pages 25-80 covered a lot of the logistical challenges of organizing the civil rights movement; the disagreements between different organizations, distrust of the LBJ after Kenedy was assassinated, and disagreements within the SNCC. During this time the fight for voting rights was blazing on and violence and killings were at a high, especially at the hands of local police who were responsible for a lot of the beatings and violence directed at protestors. Organizers were attempting to get more push behind equal voting rights by introducing the Freedom vote, which was a mock vote hosted by the SNCC that allowed African Americans to vote freely and without discrimination that took from in literacy tests and hostile test examiners, as well as the threat of retaliation as their name would be posted publicly.

I thought that this part of the book was much more compelling than the first 25 pages because it covered more of what mattered and demonstrated the importance of equal voting rights. I specifically liked how the book showed the impact of John F. Kennedy’s assassination specifically on the civil rights movement leaders. Overall it made me feel a little upset just from the amount of injustice and violence that directed at African Americans at the time.

I wonder why you showed what you did. I thought that the focus on the logistics and leadership of the civil rights movement was interesting as that’s an aspect of the civil rights movement I have never really seen before.

I don’t know what solution there needs to be as far as voting rights for all today, at least based on race. I think that voting today has a ton of issues. Whether it is insecurity or inconsistency due to laws being created on the state level instead of federal. I don’t know of any other issues that are solely based on race discrimination. I think that there are other things that are discriminatory that affect voting by proxy.

Sincerely Zac

A Letter to John Leiws

Dear John Lewis

Your book MARCH, so far has covered the despicable 16th street church bombing in Birmingham that was meant to send a message to civil rights movement leaders that they are not allowed to assemble for the right to vote. It then covers a hate crime where a group of white teens who were part of the eagle scouts shot a black teen on a bike. I thought that this depiction was amazing because of the visual aspect of the book. It did a great job of transmitting the emotion to the reader. I think the way that the story is written allows me to understand what is happening on a more emotional level. The darkness of the pages that cover the bombing made me feel what happened there just a little more bit and helped transported me back to that time. The solution is difficult to determine. How do you get rid of hate? How do you stop bombings?   I think the answers to these questions are so complicated and just hard that there isn’t much of a point for me to try to answer that. Racism is such a core evil to the human condition that I think, that, unfortunately, can’t be solved, but I hope I am wrong.

Sincerely Zac

Hello world!

Welcome to your brand new blog at sites@gsu.edu!

To get started, edit or delete this post and check out all the other options available to you.

For assistance, visit the comprehensive support site, check out the Edublogs User Guide guide or stop by The Edublogs Forums to chat with other edubloggers.

For personal support, you can attend Georgia State’s training on Edublogs or stop by The Exchange for one-on-one support.

You can also reference the free publication, The Edublogger, which is jammed with helpful tips, ideas and more.